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							 The Turning Point 
							(Revelation 14:6-13) 
							God has just 
							finished assuring the oppressed Christians that the 
							ultimate victory will be for those who resist 
							Domitian and remain faithful to God.  But God isn't 
							finished yet.  He is about to reinforce His 
							exhortation to remain faithful and now we start 
							seeing God's judgment on the Roman Empire.  As 
							mentioned in the previous study, the danger to the 
							Christians as a result of this letter being 
							understood by the Roman authorities is very real.  
							The language is becoming increasingly figurative as 
							the judgments that God will hand out to the Roman 
							Empire is revealed in detail to those who can 
							understand it.  Our understanding of the next 
							several sections depend on an understanding of who 
							the letter was written to and who the recipients of 
							God's judgment will be.   
							 
							Revelation 14:6-20 
							6 And I saw another angel flying in mid heaven, 
							having eternal good tidings to proclaim unto them 
							that dwell on the earth, and unto every nation and 
							tribe and tongue and people; 
							7 and he saith with a great voice, Fear God, and 
							give him glory; for the hour of his judgment is 
							come: and worship him that made the heaven and the 
							earth and sea and fountains of waters. 
							 
							This is a turning point in the book of Revelation.  
							The hour of God's judgment has come.  Imperial Rome 
							will not be allowed to continue on in their present 
							state.  The angel mentioned here is representative 
							of God's saints preaching the gospel to the whole 
							world, (Matthew 24:14; Colossians 1:23).  The 
							oppressed Christians are receiving another message 
							of hope.  There is good news to those who are 
							suffering.  Fear God, worship Him, stay faithful for 
							His judgment is now imminent. 
							Revelation 14:8
							 
							And another, a second angel, followed, saying, 
							Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great, that hath made 
							all the nations to drink of the wine of the wrath of 
							her fornication. 
							 
							Here, Babylon represents the Imperial Roman Empire.  
							God speaks of the destruction of the empire as if it 
							has already happened.  This will help shroud the 
							real meaning of the message from the authorities and 
							those familiar with scripture in the OT will 
							remember that God announced the fall of the real 
							Babylon at least fifty years before it happened: 
							Jeremiah 51:8, "Babylon is suddenly fallen and 
							destroyed: wail for her; take balm for her pain, if 
							so be she may be healed."  When God makes a 
							decree, it is as if it is already accomplished: 
							Isaiah 46:10, "declaring the end from the 
							beginning, and from ancient times things that are 
							not (yet) done; saying, My counsel shall stand, and 
							I will do all my pleasure" and Isaiah 48:3, "I 
							have declared the former things from of old; yea, 
							they went forth out of my mouth, and I showed them: 
							suddenly I did them, and they came to pass." 
							 
							"Babylon the 
							great, that hath made all the nations to drink of 
							the wine of the wrath of her fornication."  
							Babylon is identified as the Roman Empire here for 
							the Christians.  A discussed in the previous lesson 
							for verse 4, God considers idolatry to be spiritual 
							adultery.  John qualified this figurative Babylon as 
							being the one that forced all nations under her to 
							bow to emperor worship thereby causing them to 
							suffer God's wrath.   
							Revelation 14:9
							 
							And another angel, a third, followed them, saying 
							with a great voice, If any man worshippeth the beast 
							and his image, and receiveth a mark on his forehead, 
							or upon his hand, 
							 
							This is another warning to the Christians.  Do not 
							worship the beast or the idols of the beast and do 
							not receive the stamp of the emperor Domitian.  John 
							used the words "if any man", meaning if 
							anybody.  No one is excluded from this warning.  
							Those who would give in and worship Domitian to save 
							their fleshly selves will suffer the wrath of God as 
							vividly portrayed in the following verses.  
							 
							Revelation 
							14:10-11 
							10 he also shall drink of the wine of the wrath 
							of God, which is prepared unmixed in the cup of his 
							anger; and he shall be tormented with fire and 
							brimstone in the presence of the holy angels, and in 
							the presence of the Lamb: 
							11 and the smoke of their torment goeth up for 
							ever and ever; and they have no rest day and night, 
							they that worship the beast and his image, and whoso 
							receiveth the mark of his name. 
							One would think 
							this passage would be in no need of comment, 
							however, there are millions today who believe there 
							is no literal eternal fiery hell.  There is a lot of 
							figurative language here but it is describing a 
							literal place of eternal fire and punishment.  This 
							is supported by the words of Jesus in other 
							scripture such as Mark 9:43-48.  Again, the 
							Christians are warned not to bow down and worship 
							Domitian.  The language used by John is especially 
							strong here and should serve as a warning to these 
							Christians and others after them that God is to be 
							obeyed no matter what the immediate personal 
							consequences may be.   
							Revelation 14:12
							 
							12 Here is the patience of the saints, they that 
							keep the commandments of God, and the faith of 
							Jesus. 
							13 And I heard the voice from heaven saying, 
							Write, Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from 
							henceforth: yea, saith the Spirit, that they may 
							rest from their labors; for their works follow with 
							them. 
							John gives the 
							words here that should ring loud and clear for 
							oppressed Christians of the time and for all who 
							come afterward.  Those who keep the faith and die in 
							the Lord will be the ones numbered at the side of 
							the lamb.  Don't give up.  The wrath of Domitian is 
							temporary but the wrath of God is eternal.  "And 
							fear not them which kill the body, but are not able 
							to kill the soul : but rather fear him which is able 
							to destroy both soul and body in hell." (Matthew 
							10:28).   
							Let's pause here 
							for reflection.  Imagine ourselves in a similar 
							situation as the first century Christians living 
							under the oppression of Domitian.  It becomes law 
							that we must burn incense and sacrifice to the 
							leader of our country.  If we refuse, we would not 
							be allowed to buy food, or work for a wage, or sell 
							property or possessions.  It would be illegal for 
							our friends and acquaintances to help us. By so 
							doing, they would jeopardize their own lives.  Our 
							religion would be illegal and if we were caught 
							worshipping we could expect to be arrested and 
							executed with our children sold into slavery.  Our 
							possessions would be confiscated and sold.  Those 
							who were unable to grow their own food would find 
							their families starving to death.  There would be no 
							government assistance for anything whatsoever.  We 
							would be unable to feed our families.  Our children 
							would go hungry.  The only relief in sight would be 
							to bow down and worship the leader of our country.  
							Only then would we be allowed food.  Only then could 
							we be assured that we would not be rounded up and 
							imprisoned with our children sold into slavery.  
							 
							It cannot be 
							overstated enough that obedience to the commands of 
							God is not situational and absolutely required if 
							salvation is to be had.  The 1st century Christians 
							under the rule of Domitian were undergoing the worst 
							persecution in the history of Christianity and they 
							were expected to hold firm to the end.  God did not 
							say, "ok, it's bad, so do what you have to do and 
							I'll forgive you when this over.  The blood of my 
							son will get you all through this difficult spot."  
							Rather, God commanded over and over, "Do not bow 
							down to Domitian; do not receive the mark of the 
							beast; do not give in.  Stay faithful even if it 
							costs you your life."   The Christians under the 
							reign of Domitian were told they were expected to 
							remain faithful and obedient and failure to do so 
							would result in the unmixed wrath of God being 
							unleashed on them, being tormented with fire forever 
							and ever, never to rest again.   
							There are millions 
							and millions of people in the world today who 
							profess Christ, believe and teach that once a 
							Christian is saved, he or she cannot so sin as to be 
							forever lost.  If this were true, then the entire 
							book of Revelation is a lie.  The persecuted saints 
							of the time were expected to be faithful and failure 
							to do so resulted in their damnation.  The saints of 
							today are expected to be no less faithful.  If the 
							saints then could sin and be lost, so can we.  
							"So then, my beloved, even as ye have always obeyed, 
							not as in my presence only, but now much more in my 
							absence, work out your own salvation with fear and 
							trembling;" (Philippians 2:12) 
							Revelation 3:5 
							"He that overcometh shall thus be arrayed in 
							white garments; and I will in no wise blot his name 
							out of the book of life, and I will confess his name 
							before my Father, and before his angels." (ASV) 
							  
							  
							Sermon Outline: 
							The Turning Point (Revelation 14:6–13) 
							By David Hersey of the church of Christ at 
							Granby, MO 
							I. The Imminent Judgment of God Begins 
							
								- Revelation shifts from assurance of victory 
								to the pronouncement of judgment.
 
								- Figurative language increases for the safety 
								of the readers under Roman scrutiny.
 
								- The message must be understood in context: 
								to whom it was written and about whom.
 
							 
							II. The First Angel—A Global Call to 
							Worship God (Revelation 14:6–7) 
							
								- Angel represents the gospel being preached 
								worldwide (Matthew 24:14; Colossians 1:23).
 
								- The “eternal good tidings” offer hope to the 
								persecuted.
 
								- Judgment is imminent; fear God and worship 
								the Creator.
 
							 
							III. The Second Angel—Babylon Has Fallen 
							(Revelation 14:8) 
							
								- Babylon symbolizes Imperial Rome.
 
								- God speaks as if Rome’s destruction is 
								already accomplished (Jeremiah 51:8; Isaiah 
								46:10; 48:3).
 
								- Rome (like Babylon) has led all nations into 
								spiritual adultery through emperor worship.
 
							 
							IV. The Third Angel—A Severe Warning to 
							the Unfaithful (Revelation 14:9–11) 
							
								- A universal warning: “if any man” worships 
								the beast or receives the mark.
 
								- God’s wrath is described in fiery, eternal 
								imagery (Mark 9:43–48).
 
								- There will be no rest for those who give in 
								to emperor worship.
 
							 
							V. Endurance and Reward for the Faithful 
							(Revelation 14:12–13) 
							
								- Saints must persevere, keeping God’s 
								commandments and the faith of Jesus.
 
								- Blessing is pronounced on those who “die in 
								the Lord”—their works follow them.
 
								- Contrast between temporary wrath of Domitian 
								and eternal judgment of God.
 
							 
							VI. Real-World Application for First 
							Century Christians 
							
								- Obedience was not optional, even under 
								persecution.
 
								- Refusal to worship Domitian meant 
								starvation, slavery, death.
 
								- Yet, they were still expected to remain 
								faithful to the end.
 
							 
							VII. Modern Application—Faithfulness 
							Still Required 
							
								- God does not excuse sin due to circumstance.
 
								- If Christians then could fall away, so can 
								we.
 
								- The doctrine of “once saved, always saved” 
								is refuted by Revelation.
 
								- Faithfulness is a lifelong obligation 
								(Philippians 2:12).
 
							 
							
								  
							Call to Action 
							Let us never forget that our faith must endure 
							beyond comfort, beyond convenience—even beyond 
							suffering. If the first-century saints were expected 
							to remain faithful under threat of death, we too are 
							called to stand firm against the pressures of 
							compromise, worldliness, and doctrinal error. Let us 
							not be deceived by teachings that offer false 
							security. Our salvation is not passive—it must be 
							worked out with fear and trembling. Let us resolve 
							today to never bow to the idols of our time, never 
							deny the Lord, and never stop obeying His Word. The 
							eternal rest of the faithful awaits, but only if we 
							endure to the end. 
							
								  
							Scripture References with Key Points 
							
								- Revelation 14:6–7 – The 
								gospel is preached to the whole world; God’s 
								judgment has arrived.
 
								- Matthew 24:14; Colossians 1:23 
								– The gospel proclaimed to all nations.
 
								- Revelation 14:8 – Babylon 
								(Rome) has fallen; spiritual adultery condemned.
 
								- Jeremiah 51:8; Isaiah 46:10; Isaiah 
								48:3 – God’s decrees are certain.
 
								- Revelation 14:9–11 – Fiery 
								judgment on those who worship the beast.
 
								- Mark 9:43–48 – Jesus 
								teaches about the reality of hell.
 
								- Revelation 14:12–13 – The 
								endurance of the saints; rest and reward for the 
								faithful.
 
								- Matthew 10:28 – Fear God 
								who can destroy both soul and body in hell.
 
								- Philippians 2:12 – Work out 
								your salvation with fear and trembling.
 
								- Revelation 3:5 – Faithful 
								overcomers will not be blotted out of the book 
								of life.
 
							 
							  
							  
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