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Revelation 11:15-18

Kingship of Christ in Revelation 11:15-18

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Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds Revelation 11:15-18, presenting it as the culmination of Christ's kingship in the book of Revelation. He uses an extended analogy of a cross-country trip to explain the cyclical nature of Revelation's visions, emphasizing that this passage depicts the undisputed, eternal universal kingdom of Christ. Martin applies this vision as a pointed warning to the unconverted, a powerful summons to adoration for believers, and a precious salve of consolation for those suffering persecution, urging all to repent and flee to Christ.

Primary Texts

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Revelation 11:15-18 This passage is the central text, read and expounded to reveal the consummation of Christ's kingship.

Outline 8 sections · 55 min

  1. Introduction to the Kingship of Christ in Revelation 0:03
  2. The Setting of the Vision: Revelation's Cyclical Structure 4:20
  3. The Substance of the Vision: Proclamation of Christ's Universal and Eternal Kingdom 16:44
  4. The Substance of the Vision: Worship of the Four and Twenty Elders 26:29
  5. Significance: A Pointed Word of Admonition and Warning 30:53
  6. Significance: A Powerful Summons to Adoration 40:06
  7. Significance: A Precious Salve of Consolation 45:37
  8. Prayer and Benediction 51:51

Key Quotes

“Now without seeking to be overly simple, that's precisely what you have in the book of the Revelation. You have the history of the church in its conflict with Satan and all the host of hell from the New Testament era, that is from the very point in time when John wrote this letter to the seven churches all the way down to the consummation when Christ will come and destroy the wicked and the beast and the false prophet and he will usher in the new heaven. The heavens and the new earth.”
“But now listen carefully. It has been a disputed rule and reign and Hoeksema dared to preach through the book of the Revelation and did an admirable job when he was preaching on this very question that ought to arise said this in answer to this question it must be said that God is indeed sovereign all through the history of the world.”
“King Jesus is absolutely determined to bring to pass this universal, undisputed rule over the entire universe. Do you hear me? King Jesus, who reigns now, is determined to continue to reign until his universal reign over the entire universe is realized in the full glory of the vision of Revelation chapter 11.”
“Because God is going to have a kingdom that will cause the aggregate of all intelligent beings in heaven to say, the kingdom is become the kingdom of our God and of His Christ. God is going to have it, my friend. You can spit and fume and kick and oppose, but the hour is coming when this chorus heard in vision by John will be heard by the angels. The ears of all the redeemed, they shall join in it.”
“We need to be prostrate in holy adoration before our glorious Redeemer King, the one who loved us in Lucifer. Jesus from our sins in his own precious blood is the one who walks in the midst of the lampstands. He's the lamb in the midst of the throne. He's the one whose kingdom will be universal and unrivaled. Surely this is the essence of worship, is it not? To have our hearts run out to this Christ here and now.”
“God says, look, my children, it's as good as done. John writes what he heard, and what he heard was great voices saying, the kingdom has been. And so God is saying to the saints in the first century, although years, although millennia may pass, until this is realized in actual history, it is as good as done.”
“No tribulation without the kingdom of God. The kingdom. No kingdom without the tribulation. Isn't it amazing that when Paul and his companion went back to the young converts, Luke says that one of their main sermons was this. They told them that through much tribulation they must enter the kingdom.”
“My friend, if that is not the reflex response of your heart, you're like those squatters. You better get off that territory and flee to Christ before God makes you a monument of his holy and just wrath.”

Applications

The unconverted

  • Bow to the Son and own Him as your Savior and Sovereign, lest God banish you to hell.
  • Do not 'smart mouth God' or ignore the reality of His coming judgment; seek the Lord while He may be found.
  • If 'Even so come, Lord Jesus' is not the reflex response of your heart, flee to Christ before God's wrath comes.

All listeners

  • Consider the pointed word of admonition and warning contained in the vision of Christ's determined, universal, and undisputed rule.
  • Receive the powerful summons to adoration, letting the complete picture of Christ's kingship draw your heart to worship Him.
  • Embrace the precious salve of consolation that Christ's ultimate victory is 'as good as done,' even amidst suffering and persecution.
  • Find consolation in the promise that soon 'nothing but the will of Christ will reign in the entire universe,' and you will be with Him.
  • Ponder this glorious vision of Christ's kingship to receive its consolation, be prodded to action and adoration, and be admonished to repent and flee to Christ.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 117 paragraphs, roughly 55 minutes.

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