2025/05/05
194. The Book of Revelation and the New Testament
The Book of Revelation is structured in such a way that it defies intuition and eludes understanding so that its contents may be stored in one's memory as tacit knowledge. It is impossible for people to consciously hold the worldview of Jesus Christ, the memory of Jesus Christ who was fully God and fully human, which is as John the Evangelist wrote at the end of his Gospel: "But there are also many other things which Jesus did; were every one of them to be written, I suppose that the world itself could not contain the books that would be written" (Jn 21:25).
The first chapter of Revelation states, "Blessed is he who reads aloud the words of the prophecy, and blessed are those who hear, and who keep what is written therein; for the time is near" (Rev 1:3), which effectively declares that Revelation is a guidebook. Therefore, the letters addressed to the angel of the seven churches always include the exhortation, "He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches." The one who "reads aloud the words of the prophecy" speaks aloud "what the Spirit says to the churches" and pours it into his memory. You cannot accomplish this training in a day or two. It is necessary to continue reading Revelation aloud and listening to it at your own pace, even if only one sentence at a time, day after day, throughout your life. Even if you have difficulties with hearing, vision, or speech, it is worth somehow managing to pour the words of Revelation into your memory through your five senses, for there is immense value in Revelation.
The Holy Spirit is the Advocate Jesus sent from the Father to us, the Spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father. The Holy Spirit, who came to bear witness to Jesus, also calls us Christians to bear witness (cf. Jn 15:26-27). For this reason, we, too, need the worldview that the Apostles, who had been with Jesus from the beginning, shared with him. That is the worldview of Jesus Christ, who was one hundred per cent God and human. Revelation satisfies this need. By pouring the words of Revelation into our memory through our five senses, we unconsciously experience Jesus Christ's worldview in a simulated manner. Therefore, this training includes scenes that are sublime beyond human imagination and terrifying scenes. Revelation is in the New Testament with this intention.
The structure of Revelations is as follows. Chapter 1 is a prophetic account of Jesus Christ, who is with us, the Church. Next, the letters addressed to the angles of the seven churches prophesy the problems the church community faced and their solutions (Chapters 2–3). These solutions are revealed through the prophecy of the establishment of the New Testament (Chapters 4–11). However, the mysteries of the priesthood and the Eucharist are hidden in the wilderness and heaven and are not revealed. In this situation, the prophecy of the fate of the Church (Chapters 12-16) occurs, followed by the prophecy of the fall of the Church, which has been tossed about by the tide of history (Chapters 17-18). It is a prophecy that light will shine over the darkness by exposing the various problems the Church has been facing and hiding. Beyond that lies the prophecy of the completion of the liturgy of the Mass (Chapters 19–20), which becomes a hope for the truth. However, it also contains a prophecy of severe judgment. That is so that all people created by God may enter the "prophecy of the spirituality of the Holy Spirit" (Chapters 21–22), which leads them to understand God's life and love.
In this way, the Book of Revelation is composed of seven prophecies. The most astonishing thing is that Revelation, written in the first century, prophesies the New Testament, established in the fourth century. Moreover, it prophesies it in the same order as the Bible today. First, there is a throne in heaven, and someone is seated on it (cf. Rev 4:1–6). There, the "four living creatures" imply the images of the four Gospels, and it is suggested that they are already in heaven (cf. 4:7–11). The author of Revelation sees a scroll sealed with seven seals in the right hand of the one seated on the throne. And the "Lamb standing, as though it had been slain," that is, the Holy Spirit sent in the name of Jesus, breaks the seals and opens the scroll, which is the New Testament (cf. 5:1–14).
As the seven seals are opened one after another, the four Gospels (cf. Rev 6:1–8), the Acts of the Apostles (cf. 6:9–11), and the Epistles of Paul (cf. 6:12–17) are introduced in this order using prophetic words. When the last seal is broken, the Book of Revelation is introduced, and the Catholic epistles are mentioned there, too (cf. Chapters 8-11). The contents resist intuitive grasp and are structured in an incomprehensible form. However, as seen in the letters addressed to the angles of the seven churches we have examined so far, the descriptions of Revelation and the contents of the New Testament associated with them, which are being testified to here, exist simultaneously like the two sides of a coin as the story unfolds. These passages are also written using a technique distinctive to the Book of Revelation.
From the next issue onwards, I will summarise the descriptions in Revelation when each seal is opened and the corresponding contents of the New Testament and explore the possibility that Revelation allows readers to unconsciously experience the worldview of Jesus Christ in a simulated manner.
Maria K. M.