Monday, August 23, 2021

Silence and Storm


 

I love the story of a man who stopped by his bank to cash a check.  Just as he got into the lobby, another man with a large bag came running past him, apparently heading for the exit.  Then the bank security guard came dashing by, followed by several bank employees.  The security guard tackled the man with the bag, handcuffed him and hauled him back into the bank.

The man who had gone in to cash his check was shaking like a leaf.  I've seen my first robbery, he said to himself.  As he approached the teller's window, he couldn't resist finding out more about what he had just witnessed.  Was that really a robbery? he queried.  Oh, no, sir, the teller replied calmly.  That was only our substantial penalty for early withdrawal.[1]

We have seen thus far in our study of Revelation the beginning of the Great Tribulation, God's substantial penalty.  There have been six seals of judgment.  Suddenly the seventh seal is broken, and it unleashes a strange silence in heaven. 

The Meaning of the Silence

The previous six seals were opened with immediate and powerful judgments that came on the earth.  Why is it that now, at the opening of the seventh seal, there is a holy hush?

THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD
When the Lamb broke the seventh seal on the scroll, there was silence throughout heaven for about half an hour.  I saw the seven angels who stand before God, and they were given seven trumpets. Revelation 8.1-2

In a church I served we used to sing  Habakkuk 2:20 out of an old hymnal[2]:

But the Lord is in his holy Temple.  Let all the earth be silent before him.”  Habakkuk 2:20

In another church their updated hymnal[3] quoted Zechariah:

Be silent before the Lord, all humanity, for he is springing into action from his holy dwelling.”  Zechariah 2:13

When Moses stood before the burning bush and realized God was speaking, he could do nothing but get on his face and listen.  When John the Baptist's father heard of his wife's conceiving, he became speechless for the whole pregnancy.  There is just something about silence that tells everyone God is holy.  In the middle of the night when you are alone, and if you get honest with yourself, you know God is there – and it's scary! 

Silence expresses the sovereignty of God.  Today's generation needs noise and activity to blot out the possibility of God.  Producers of TV programs don't allow scenes to drag on.  They change the picture every 2-3 seconds; they use snappy dialogue and bright contrasts in color, brightness, mood – all so the viewer won't have time to think – just be overwhelmed with emotions and infused with the desire to go buy the products advertised.  Silence isn't desired, because if you had time to think, you might ask yourself if you even needed the products they advertise.  The sovereignty of God thunders in silence.

THE SAINTS' PRAYERS
Then another angel with a gold incense burner came and stood at the altar.  And a great amount of incense was given to him to mix with the prayers of God’s people as an offering on the gold altar before the throne.  The smoke of the incense, mixed with the prayers of God’s holy people, ascended up to God from the altar where the angel had poured them out.  Revelation 8:3-4

Someone wrote the reason things got quiet in heaven was because God would rather hear the prayer of one believer than the sweetest singing of all the angels. 

Notwithstanding, here God is entertaining the prayers of the tribulation saints – those who have been martyred.  What kind of prayers are they?  They are the imprecatory prayers of God's people for the vengeance of God on the wicked persecutors.  They're asking God to take revenge on the heathen unbelievers. 

If you’re inclined to think God’s people never pray and beg for God to bring the bad guys to justice, you don’t understand human nature, or you’re just being dishonest.  Read Psalm 109 sometime.  David, the sweet, loving shepherd boy asks God to make the children of his enemies all orphans who go hungry continually, and have their entire family cut off from memory.[4]

This kind of prayer hardly seems appropriate for the Christian church to listen to let alone pray.  But it does speak of the kind of vindication we would like to see.  A wise man once said, if there was any justice in this world, people would occasionally be permitted to fly over pigeons.[5]

Have you ever prayed that way?  Never underestimate the silence of God on the matter.

Then the angel filled the incense burner with fire from the altar and threw it down upon the earth; and thunder crashed, lightning flashed, and there was a terrible earthquake.  Revelation 8.5

This is the warning of God that judgment is about to be meted-out for mistreating His own.  This is not the first shadow of hot coals of judgment.

Then the Lord spoke to the man in linen clothing and said, “Go between the whirling wheels beneath the cherubim, and take a handful of burning coals and scatter them over the city.” He did this as I watched.  Ezekiel 10:2

We ought never to wonder if God has the ability or stomach to judge righteously.  We aren't home yet!  The game has a few more innings.

The Storm

Trumpets placed in the hands of angels begin to blow the storm of judgment on the earth.  Trumpets, in the Bible, can stand for several things. 

·       They may sound an alarm, a wake-up call to the dangers of forsaking God. 

·       They can be an alert to worship. 

·       They can also sound an assembly, as when the enemy is coming. 

What kind of storm do these trumpets invoke?

SEVERE JUDGMENTS IN ANSWER TO THE SAINTS' PRAYERS
Then the seven angels with the seven trumpets prepared to blow their mighty blasts.  The first angel blew his trumpet, and hail and fire mixed with blood were thrown down on the earth.  One-third of the earth was set on fire, one-third of the trees were burned, and all the green grass was burned.  Then the second angel blew his trumpet, and a great mountain of fire was thrown into the sea.  One-third of the water in the sea became blood, one-third of all things living in the sea died, and one-third of all the ships on the sea were destroyed.  Then the third angel blew his trumpet, and a great star fell from the sky, burning like a torch.  It fell on one-third of the rivers and on the springs of water.  The name of the star was Bitterness.  It made one-third of the water bitter, and many people died from drinking the bitter water.  Then the fourth angel blew his trumpet, and one-third of the sun was struck, and one-third of the moon, and one-third of the stars, and they became dark.  And one-third of the day was dark, and also one-third of the night.  Revelation 8:6-12

Trumpets of judgment fill our songs.  Julia Ward Howe wrote our Battle Hymn of the Republic,

He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat.

He is sifting-out the hearts of men before his judgment seat.[6]

Another 17th century poet, John Dryden wrote:

The trumpet shall be heard on high,

The dead shall live, the living die,

And music shall untune the sky![7]

The question is always asked:  Are these literal or symbolic judgments?  We want to know:

·       will blood really mix with fire and hail? 

·       Will a literal mountain be picked up and thrown into San Francisco Bay? 

I hope so!  That would be quite a site when I'm watching from the sky, sitting next to Jesus.  But other interpretations are possible. 

·       The literal judgment says the land will be scorched; symbolism says it means the masses of people (numerous as the grass) will die in a plague. 

·       Literal judgment says the seas will be polluted; symbolism takes the seas of people through a new Hitler-like holocaust. 

·       Literal interpretation says the rivers will be affected; symbolic thought measures the length and breadth of Satan's influence. 

·       Literalists see the heaven's orbit tossed about; and the symbolic look talks of overthrown governments.

Either interpretation is scary!  Either interpretation needs to be remembered in the context as God's response to the prayers of His people for vindication.  We know God is love, and prefers to forgive, rather than judge.  However, He did say,

Dear friends, never take revenge.  Leave that to the righteous anger of God.  For the Scriptures say, “I will take revenge; I will pay them back,” says the Lord. Romans 12:19

Anything God promises – good or bad – will happen! 

There is also a warning for the inhabitants of the earth to prepare, or brace themselves for the next three trumpets.

A WARNING THAT THE WORST HASN'T BEEN SEEN
Then I looked, and I heard a single eagle crying loudly as it flew through the air, “Terror, terror, terror to all who belong to this world because of what will happen when the last three angels blow their trumpets.”  Revelation 8:13

Although some of the ancient texts says an "angel" is flying, most translations say it is an "eagle."  This is consistent with Jesus' warning in his last sermon from Mount Olivet[8].  An eagle is an omen of danger.  This is a bird with a terrible word for the world.  The foul-mouthed eagle warns that the inhabitants of the earth had better look-out – they hadn't seen anything yet!

There is a silence even today, as God is patiently calling and allowing the lost to come into the safety of His family in Christ.  Friends do not mistake the stillness of silence for the absence of a storm.  God may appear to be silent, but He is not absent-minded.

The mighty Niagara River plummets some 180 feet at the American and Horseshoe Falls.  Before the falls, there are violent, turbulent rapids.  Farther upstream, however, where the river's current flows more gently, boats can navigate. Just before the Weiland River empties into the Niagara, a pedestrian walkway spans the river. Posted on this bridge's pylons is a warning sign for all boaters:

There is a point on the Niagara River that is the point of no return.[9]  There is a time when the anchor will be necessary to keep you from going over the falls.

For now we are in life's quiet waters upstream.  God is silent, and the turbulence is minor.  But the signs are on the horizon.  There will come a time when an anchor will be needed.  That anchor is Jesus Christ. 

Remember, there is always a silence before the storm! 

Title Image:  Pixabay.com   Unless noted, Scripture from The New Living Translation 


[1]Ed Warren in Reader's Digest

[2]The Broadman Hymnal, (Nashville, Broadman Press, 1940), 483

[3]The Baptist Hymnal, (Nashville, Convention Press, 1991), 80

[4] Read Psalm 109 here

[5]Gene Brown, News-Times (Danbury, Conn)

[6]Julia Ward Howe, Draper's Book of Quotations for the Christian World, (Wheaton, Tyndale        House Publishers, Inc., 1992)

[7]John Dryden, Ibid

[8] Just as the gathering of vultures shows there is a carcass nearby, so these signs indicate that the end is near.  

    Matthew 24:28

[9]"To Illustrate", Leadership, Summer, 1992, vol. XIII NO.3, 47. 

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