The Revelation of Jesus Christ to the Churches: Overcome
Re 1:1, Re 22:16 — Bookend.
Reading would be out loud
Re 1:3, Re 22:10 — Another bookend.
Message to the Seven Churches: Peace From The Father, Seven Spirits, and Jesus
The throne is clearly the Father's.
He is not just King of Kings but also prince or ruler, ἄρχων, of the kings.
“Released” (λύω) appears in the Critical Text, while “washed” (λούω) is found in the Majority Text; in Greek, these two verbs differ by only a single letter. Within Revelation’s broader context, Christ is portrayed as the one who ransoms and redeems, whereas the saints are described as washing themselves (7:14; 22:14). This pattern suggests that, in this instance, the sense of Christ freeing rather than washing is the more contextually fitting reading. Keep in mind that those who come out of great tribulation (7:14) are saints who are washed in the blood of Jesus, that group is not identified by any other works.
Re 1:5, Re 3:14
Kingdom of Priests unto God
Important Note: Textual variants cause Revelation 1:6 in some translations, such as the ESV, to read, "He made us into a kingdom, priests to His God and Father." Likewise, Revelation 5:10 reads, "You have made them into a kingdom and priests to our God, and they will reign upon the earth." The evidence strongly suggests that the intended theme is "a kingdom of priests," not KJV's "kings and priests" echoing Exodus 19:6: "And ye shall be unto me a kingdom of priests, and an holy nation."
ἀμήν — "truly" for Amen
Re 1:7, Re 10:1, Re 14:14-16, Daniel 7:13 — Jesus coming in the clouds.
John 19:37, Zechariah 12:10 — This is making it very clear the type of death Jesus died and connecting him to the person who is coming in the clouds.
Companion in Tribulation
Important Note: John points out that, regarding the church, he is in tribulation, and the saints who will be in tribulation can be patient in Jesus as he is. The letters to the churches apply to a past church, a present church, and a future tribulation church.
Tribulation for the church is not unique to what has been labeled as "the great tribulation" of 7 years. All Christians will face tribulation. When we read Revelation and John speaks of being a "companion in tribulation," he is referring to that shared trouble we have in this world. But there is also a tribulation that is great, taking place over 7 years, and many will enter into it. So when we see reference to the "patience of the saints," we should not confuse the tribulation we face every day as the church with what is meant to be a very particular tribulation at a very particular time. This is why many use the special label "the great tribulation" to make that distinction clear. Here John is making a soft relation in the shared theme of waiting on Jesus. 13:10, 14:12, 6:9, 12:17, 14:12
Jesus Speaks with Trumpet Voice
Important Note: In verse 10, we learn that a voice is described as a trumpet. So, when we see messengers with trumpets, we can see them as voices of announcement and as literal trumpets. This does not exclude the idea that the 7 trumpet judgments could be literal trumpets, but this text here is leaning towards great and powerful voices rather than objects.
Re 1:10, Re 4:1
Re 1:8, Re 1:11, Re 1:17, Re 2:8, Re 21:6, Re 22:13 — Majority Text – Here and in Revelation 22:13, the context favors Jesus as speaking, so "Alpha and Omega" in these places is best taken as his title. Elsewhere in Revelation, Jesus and the Father share divine titles, as in Revelation 1:8 (Father) and 1:17-18 (Jesus).
John Sees Glorified Jesus
Re 1:13, Re 14:14
Re 1:13, Re 15:6 — Soft link to priestly garments. Jesus is girded about the μαστοῖς "mastos", the upper chest, not the loins here. In 15:6, seven messengers have the same type of dressage.
This is the only time wool is used and that is strictly related to the Lamb.
Does "white" apply to both head and hair? Yes, λευκαὶ applies to κεφαλή (head) + τρίχες (hairs)
Re 1:16, Re 12:1 — This is like the woman with the 12 stars, but they are not the same. The 7 stars seem to represent the gentile church leaders, and the 12 stars represent the tribes of Israel.
Re 1:18, Re 6:8, Re 20:13-14
Re 1:1, Re 1:3, Re 1:19, Re 4:1, Re 22:6, Re 22:10 — The primary direction of the word of Revelation is for the future. However, it is set in the context of the current time. Notably, the past is not the concern of the book of Revelation, so we will not see anything here from John's time into the past.
Seven Churches
Important Note: It is not a highly important theological detail in the study of Revelation, but it is worth noting that there is debate over whether the seven stars in Revelation 1 represent angels or the human leaders of the churches. Also, all the churches are told to "hear." We will see this again in Revelation 13:9, when the saints are given the choice to worship the beast or likely be killed. This kind of connection might lead one to think the church is destined for the tribulation. Yet the call to "hear" is not a link to identity but to obedience — a call directed to a particular people, the saints, whether outside or inside the tribulation.
Bookends: There are bookends within the messages to the seven churches. the bookends are the opening and closing churches that need to return to God: Ephesus and Laodicea.
See the 12 stars in Chapter 12; these are the 12 tribes in Chapter 12, and these 7 stars are of the church messengers. Both are the human leaders of their respective groups.
Linear Scene 1.1: Jesus sent His messenger to John to share the end times signs, timeline, and church corrections and encouragements. This messenger appears to be a prophet based on Revelation 22. Jesus will speak to the seven churches, telling them all that to overcome, and we will see that call for the church to again overcome at the end of in Revelation 21:7. This message is about the future, not past events. Things that “must shortly come to pass” and that Jesus will show John “things which must be hereafter”. This is a core understanding that must frame our interpretation of the text. The events John is witnessing have not yet taken place. The woman with 12 stars who gives birth is a future event. The fall of Mystery Babylon is a future event. The arrival of the New Jerusalem out of heaven is a future event.
Bookends: In the main story, we have the bookends of the blessings of “the words of this prophecy”. Yet greater, the “Alpha and Omega” speaks, opening and closing the book.