Revelation 1
Revelation 1
The risen Christ unveils His glory to strengthen His suffering churches with worship, witness, warning, and hope.
Sets the book's opening burden from the available chapter or passage coverage.
Revelation moves from the risen Christ's call to suffering churches to repent and endure, through visions of heavenly worship that establish God's unshakeable reign, to the unveiling of the slain Lamb as the one worthy to judge and redeem all things, thereby assuring believers that Christ's sacrificial victory over sin and death is the final word over all earthly powers and the guarantee of their ultimate vindication.
Return to the storyline index when you want to compare the wider canonical movement of Scripture by book.
Revelation 1
The risen Christ unveils His glory to strengthen His suffering churches with worship, witness, warning, and hope.
Sets the book's opening burden from the available chapter or passage coverage.
Revelation 2
The risen Christ knows the true condition of His churches and calls them to repent, endure, reject compromise, and overcome by faithful allegiance to Him.
Develops the book's central pressure points and theological movement.
Revelation 3
Christ sees the real condition of His churches and calls them to wake up, hold fast, repent, and overcome in light of His coming and reward.
Marks the book's major turn in the available coverage.
Revelation 4
Before Revelation unveils judgment on earth, it unveils worship in heaven: God reigns from the throne and is worthy as the holy Creator of all things.
Carries the book toward its climactic emphasis.
Revelation 5
The slain Lamb alone is worthy to open the scroll because by His blood He has redeemed a people for God and conquered through sacrifice.
Closes the book's movement and final emphasis.
Sacrifice is God's appointed means by which sin is addressed, worship is expressed, and reconciliation with God is symbolically and covenantally maintained, ultimately fulfilled in the once-for-all sacrificial death of Jesus Christ.
The kingdom of God is God's sovereign rule exercised over His creation, revealed throughout Scripture, opposed by human rebellion, advanced through His redemptive acts, and brought to its decisive fulfillment in Jesus Christ before reaching its full consummation in the new creation.
Christology is the biblical revelation of the person and work of Jesus Christ, showing that He is the promised Messiah, the Son of God, the true King, the perfect Priest, the final sacrifice, and the one through whom God's redemptive purposes are fulfilled.
Atonement is God's provision through which the guilt of sin is dealt with, reconciliation with Him is made possible, and His justice and mercy are upheld, ultimately accomplished through the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ.
Covenant is the binding relationship God establishes by His own authority through which He orders His relationship with humanity, governs His redemptive purposes, and carries His promises forward throughout the biblical storyline.
Creation and new creation form the great opening and closing movements of the biblical storyline, revealing that God created the world good, that sin brought corruption and death into it, and that through Christ God is restoring and renewing creation so that His purposes are fulfilled forever.
The glory of God refers to the visible and revealed manifestation of God's greatness, holiness, and majesty, displayed in His works, His presence among His people, and ultimately in the person and work of Jesus Christ.
Holiness in Scripture describes God's absolute moral purity, uniqueness, and separation from sin, as well as the calling of His people to reflect His character through lives set apart for Him.