Judgement;
God's Passive and Active Judgement; Rev. 6:1-2; Rom.
We live in a world today where people are increasingly hostile to the
truth of God’s Word. It is more and more evident that just the reading of the
Word of God, just the very knowledge that there are conservative Bible
believing Christians that might actually take the principles in God’s Word and
let them impact the way they live, angers and meets a hostile reaction from
elements in the culture in which we live. And just because they know that when
a believer makes a certain statement that implies a belief in the absolute it
shakes them to the very core. Part of the reason for this is because, as we
will see in Romans chapter one, in every single human being there is the absolute
knowledge that God exists and that God’s Word is God’s Word, and that it
represents the way things actually are. But fallen man in his rejection of God
is constantly suppressing the truth in unrighteousness, and in a culture that
has moved into the whole realm of licentiousness and of tolerance and promotion
of sin, when suddenly people who have managed to anaesthetise themselves to any
kind of absolute morality come into contact with somebody who believe in
absolutes that ugly little sense of God that they have down in their souls
starts to rear, in their opinion, its ugly little head and they have to stuff
it back down. Often their reaction is quite hostile and quite violent. And the
more we live in a culture that is dominated by relativism, by atheism, by just
pure permissiveness in every area of life, the more the reaction to those who
believe in the truth is going to come forward. This is simply a picture of the
extreme hostility that will be present in the Tribulation against those who
hold to the teaching of God’s Word.
One of the elements that comes out of this is the fact that the Bible
teaches that there is future accountability for every single human being, that
it some point we will all stand before God, the ultimate judge of the universe.
As believers we will be evaluated at the judgment seat of Christ but
unbelievers will go before the great white throne judgment at the end of the
Millennial kingdom; but there is this principle of accountability, the
principle that we cannot live life as we would like to live life. Throughout
history God has built into the nature of reality, moral laws and spiritual
absolutes, that when they are violated they bring about certain consequences.
But rebellious, autonomous man, man who has rejected God and who tries to live
as if there is no God constantly rails against this whole idea that there are
absolutes. The book of Judges in the Old Testament is a perfect portrayal of
what man wants to do living in autonomy from God: everyone did that which was
right in his own eyes. That is just a pure moral relativism that occurred
during the time of the Judges and it led to the anarchy and the collapse of all
order in
That brings our focus on two principles that are embedded throughout
Scripture, and specifically in the book of Revelation. In Revelation 6-19 the
focal point is on divine judgment in history, It is a judgment that has been
put off until the right time. Six times between chapters 6 and 19 we have the
use of the word “wrath”—either
the wrath of the Lamb or the wrath of God. This word “wrath” is a term that is
used in Scripture to talk about the judgment of God, the exercise of His
judicial power in human history as He brings judgment upon man for their sins.
So we see the principle in Scripture that God is going to judge sin. Man cannot
just sin and rebel against the authority of God with impunity and there are two
ways in which God judges sin.
The first way has to do with internal dynamics. What that means is
things that God has built into the warp and woof of the ways things are,
reality—moral laws, spiritual laws. It is the principle that we often see, that
we reap what we sow. There are certain consequences that will flow from sinful
actions. They may not occur immediately, it may take months or years before the
consequences build up enough and there are negative results. This is a judgment
that God builds into the internal dynamics and we often see the judgment come
with the cumulative effects of bad decisions. In history the cumulative effect
of bad decisions can often be quite disastrous. Fortunately, God in His grace
often overrides those natural consequences. On the other hand, God in His grace
has often restrained the effects of evil so that many people, many
organisations and groups, have wanted to perpetuate certain kinds of behaviour,
certain kinds of actions, certain philosophical systems, and have been
prevented from doing so. Human history should be much worse than it has been
but God has restrained evil. That restraint of evil will disappear during the
Tribulation period. God also has an indirect intervention that goes along with
these internal dynamics where He will at times remove certain restraints in the
history of certain people and cultures and mankind in general, and as we will
see in Romans chapter one, He gives the people over to their evil
intentions.
The second way is what could be called external dynamics. This is where
we have a direct supernatural intervention by God in history. For example, the
flood of Noah was an external dynamic where God intervened supernaturally and
caused a world-wide flood in order to judge those who were in rebellion against
Him. There was also the judgment at the time of the exodus. The ten plagues
that God brought against
Rom 1:18-19 NASB “For the wrath of God is revealed from
heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the
truth in unrighteousness,
“…all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men.” These two nouns are
linked together by the grammar. They are not identical but they are synonyms
and they refer to two aspects of the same thing. The first word is asebeia [a)sebeia]. The “a” is
equivalent to the English “un”. The word sebeia
has a rich history going back to classical Greek and originally it had the idea
of keeping your distance from something. It came to indicate reverence of fear
for something and it was applied to religion in the sense of having piety
toward a deity, having a sense of respect. When it comes to the Old Testament
usage it relates to the concept of having a fear of God—not fear in the sense
of being fearful or afraid but the sense that we recognise that God is the ultimate
authority and there is accountability, and so just as a child should be
motivated to obey his parents by a fear of the consequences human beings should
be fearful of God because they know that there is accountability and there is
future judgment. But when there is asebeia
there is no fear of God, no concern for God, no spiritual life, no recognition
of God’s authority at all. That word is combined in this passage with adikia [a)dikia]. It comes from
the noun dike [dikh] meaning
“righteousness,” so adikia means
“unrighteousness.” So the expression that we have here in Romans 1:18 is that
the wrath of God is revealed against those who have rejected God’s authority
and rejected the standard of behaviour as expressed in the righteousness of His
character.
Then we have a relative clause that describes this category of men. It
is not describing all mankind because there are those who have responded in
positive volition, trusted God, wanted to know more about God and responded
positively to the gospel. But this is wrath against a certain classification of
mankind who “suppress the truth in unrighteousness.” The idea there is
suppression is the idea of holding something down, pushing it down. It is
knowledge of God that is built into the heart of man because we are in the
image and likeness of God that is constantly going to be bringing itself to the
surface. There is nothing man can do to change that and yet man in his fallen
state in negative volition seeks to suppress it, to push it down, to constantly
try to stuff it down into the basement of his soul, but it constantly keeps
popping up because everything in God’s creation keeps reminding them again and
again and again that God is and that God exists and that they will be
accountable to Him. The more they resist the more sensitive they become to any
witness or testimony to the reality of God the more they just go ballistic
every time somebody mentions there might be a God. They can’t live on the basis
of the reality that there is a God because that means that they are going to be
accountable, and that is the one thing they are trying to suppress.
The next phrase “in unrighteousness” is really an expression of
means—they suppress it by means of unrighteousness. In other words, there is an
unrighteous thought system that seeks to justify the rejection of God. The
reason they do that is stated in verse 19: “because that which is known about
God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them.” In their soul
they have complete certainty of the existence of God but they’ve been
suppressing it, covering it up, drugging it, doing everything in their power to
try to stuff this down into the sub-basement of their thought. We may tell them
that God exists and they will say they don’t believe God exists because they have
been suppressing this for so long.
Romans 1:20 NASB “For since the creation of the world His
invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly
seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse.
Then God is going to do something and this explains how God works to
remove the restraint of sin and evil. Romans
Romans
Romans 1:26 NASB “For this reason God gave them
over to degrading passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for
that which is unnatural,
Romans 1:28 NASB “And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge
God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which
are not proper,
The first four seal judgments, the four horsemen, represent a natural
internal dynamic that God has built into the system. When we get down to the
next judgments we then begin to see God’s direct supernatural intervention in
terms of the judgments, but these first four judgments all flow naturally from
the consequences of sinfulness of man and the rejection of God and His
authority. The riders are not representative of human beings, they are
personifications of the judgments that God is allowing to take place upon the
earth as he has pulled back His restraint of evil. The first horseman is the
conqueror and represents the conquest of the Antichrist, and initially that
conquest is a peaceful conquest as represented by the fact that he has a bow
but no arrows.
Revelation 6:3 NASB “When He broke the second seal, I
heard the second living creature saying, ‘Come.’ [4] And another [of the same
kind], a red horse, went out; and to him who sat on it, it was granted to take
peace from the earth, and that {men} would slay one another; and a great sword
was given to him.” The second seal is the removal of peace and as restraint is
taken away war breaks out. This represented in Daniel 7 by the little horn
taking power through military action against three of the horns to establish
his kingdom in the western confederacy of the revived
Again we have a parallelism with Matthew chapter 24. Beginning in 24:4
Jesus is answering the question: What are the signs of your coming? What Jesus
says in answer to that, beginning in verse 4, is not related to the trends of
this dispensation. At the end He says: “These are the beginnings of the birth
pangs.” So everything we have here—even though we have famines and poverty and
earthquakes, etc. now, He is not talking about now; He is not talking about
trends today at all, He is talking about what will happen at the beginning of
the Tribulation. Famines relates to the third seal judgment and earthquakes
relates the fifth seal judgment. But then He says: “But all these things are
{merely} the beginning of birth pangs.” Then in verse 9 NASB “Then
they will deliver you to tribulation, and will kill you, and you will be hated
by all nations because of My name.” That is the martyrdom that occurs in the
fifth seal judgment. As we go through this and we get down to the fourth seal
judgment we learn that one fourth of the earth is killed during this time.
Then we come to the third seal judgment, Revelation 6:5 NASB “When He broke the third
seal, I heard the third living creature saying, ‘Come.’ I looked, and behold, a
black horse; and he who sat on it had a pair of scales in his hand.” The scales
are going to indicate value. We use scales to weigh out certain things that we
purchase. [6] “And I heard {something} like a voice in the center of the four
living creatures saying, ‘A quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of
barley for a denarius; and do not damage the oil and the wine.’” From the
imagery that we saw in chapters four and five the one who is in the midst of
the four living creatures is the Lamb who was slain. This is the Lord Jesus
Christ speaking. The first seal judgment was the allowance of conquest—even
though it began without war it eventually led to war in the second seal judgment.
War led to the destruction of both the means of production and the distribution
of products. Products can’t make it to market and there becomes a scarcity of
products. Economics is ruled by the law of supply and demand, and when there is
a large supply and a low demand the products are cheap. When there is a low
supply and a high demand then the cost of the goods will go up. In the
Tribulation period in the third seal judgment it is not an artificially
restricted supply, it is a supply that is going to be restricted because of the
outbreak of war. So there is a destruction of the entire infrastructure where
supplies and moved from the farm to the market, and as a result of that prices
are going to go through the roof on basic staples.
A denarius is the equivalent to a day’s wage. So if a day’s wage is what
half a pound of flour is going to cost we get some idea of how difficult it is
going to be to survive. What is not damaged is the oil and the wine, and this
represents luxury items. So the rich get richer, the wealthy have the resources
to still get what they need, but the people who get damaged the most in this
seal judgment are going to be the people who are at the lower end of the
economic scale. But it is going to be the natural consequence of the arrogance
of man that leads first to the international conquest by the Antichrist, then
the breakout of incredible war, and then here we will see the damaging economic
consequences. We will see in the fourth seal that this leads to incredible
death.