May 11, 2026
We live in an age defined by uncertainty and polarization. Wars and economic stability dominate headlines, leaving many fearful about the future. Communities and even churches are divided, while technology, rising mental health struggles, and fear-driven media are defining the emotional realities of our age.
Into such a climate does the Book of Revelation speak with surprising relevance. Though the book is often presented as a puzzle to be decoded, its message to the original readers was one of perseverance and hope, as believers were pressured to accommodate Rome's culture and idolatry.
Revelation Reminds Us that God is Still in Control
One of the most powerful scenes in Revelation occurs in chapters 4 and 5, as John is ushered into the throne room of heaven. Before any conflicts or judgments are revealed, before any beasts arise, John is presented with a throne and the One seated on it.
Revelation was written to seven churches living under the shadow of the Roman Empire, where Christians faced persecution, hostility, economic pressures, and uncertainty about the future. At a time when Rome seemed invincible, Revelation pulls back the curtain to a greater reality: Caesar is not on the throne, God is.
As news cycles depict global chaos and cultural shifts that leave many unsettled, Revelation anchors us to the unchanging truth of God’s rule over history.
Revelations Calls Believers to be Faithful Witnesses
The seven churches in Revelation faced compromise, complacency, temptation, and opposition that often led to suffering. The challenges facing those churches are not entirely different from the challenges many believers face today. It is tempting for believers to either withdraw or become consumed by outrage and despair.
Revelation presents a different way forward, one rooted in faithful witness and patient endurance. The church shines brightest when believers live out their faith courageously and truthfully, despite the political and cultural instability that has gripped so much of our world. Discipleship is one of the major focus points of the book, despite it rarely being treated as such.
Revelation Exposes the False Promises of Earthly Empires
A recurring theme throughout the book is the exposure of systems that demand ultimate allegiance, while being nothing more than counterfeits of the true God. Many today place their hope in economic, political, technological, or cultural ideologies that offer temporary solutions, while Revelation reminds us that no earthly system can bear the weight of ultimate hope.
When people place ultimate trust in temporary things, anxiety and fear become inevitable because temporary things always fail. Revelation redirects our hope from all that is unstable and transient to that which is eternal and true.
Revelation Ends with Hope, Not Despair
Perhaps the most disconcerting misconception of Revelation is that it is fundamentally a book of catastrophe. It does contain scenes of conflict and judgment, but that is not where the story ends. For believers living in an anxious age, the book’s final vision is one of restoration and a renewed creation. Tears are wiped away, suffering is removed, and the curse of sin and death is reversed.
Knowing how it ends doesn’t eliminate existing struggles, but it does transform how we endure our present reality. Fear, anxiety, and hopelessness do not have the final say. Revelation calls us to see behind the headlines and to view history through the lens of heaven’s perspective. At ground level, events can feel overwhelming and confusing, but from God’s vantage point, history is neither random nor out of control. A history that is moving in the direction of Christ’s return and the renewal of all things.
That message alone is deeply needed today.
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May 13, 2020 2 Comments
April 29, 2020 13 Comments
There's nothing like a pandemic to bring out the best and the worst in people. I can't say I'm surprised, these things have a way of showing people's true colours and where their confidence, or can I say, suspicions, lie.
What is disheartening is what I'm seeing and hearing from those who claim to be followers of Jesus, Worse yet, are those who hold leadership platforms who are using them in ways that is, at least in my mind, not only disheartening, but downright embarrassing.
April 16, 2020 3 Comments
This is my newest grandson, Noah. I already have scads of pictures of him even though he just turned two months old, but this one is my favourite.
For a time I couldn't figure out why it rose to the top, but after one gruelling day of trying to manage life in the midst of a pandemic it suddenly hit me.