Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - The First and the Last
Episode Date: May 27, 2026There are lots of letters in the Bible, but only one place has a series of letters written directly from Jesus to the churches — and that’s in Revelation. Jesus appears to the now elderly apostle ...John on the isle of Patmos, where John is in exile, and it is quite an amazing vision. In it, there are three vivid contrasts. Each one tells us something that will make a real difference in our lives. Let’s look at the contrasts: 1) Jesus has come but is coming, 2) John is stunned but still alive, and 3) we are suffering but brilliant. This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on June 29, 2008. Series: Revelation: Jesus’ Letters to the Church. Scripture: Revelation 1:7-20. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.
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Welcome to Gospel in Life.
What would it be like to hear Jesus speak directly to the church today?
In the book of Revelation, we're given a rare glimpse of exactly that, Jesus addressing his followers
with words of comfort, hope, and calling.
Today, Tim Keller explores how these letters to ancient churches invite us to examine our
own hearts and receive the healing and renewal Christ offers.
Good morning.
Our scripture reading this morning is taken from the Revelation,
of John chapter one verses seven through 20 look he is coming with the clouds and every eye will see him
even those who pierced him and all the peoples of the earth will mourn because of him so shall it be
amen i am the alpha and the omega says the lord god who is and who was and who is to come
the Almighty. I, John, your brother and companion in the suffering and kingdom and patient endurance
that are ours in Jesus was on the island of Patmos because of the word of God and the testimony
of Jesus. On the Lord's Day I was in the Spirit and I heard behind me a loud voice like a trumpet
which said, write on a scroll what you see and send it to the seven churches to Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thytira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and Laodicea.
I turned around to see the voice that was speaking to me, and when I turned, I saw seven golden lampstands,
and among the lampstands was someone like a son of man, dressed in a robe reaching down.
down to his feet and with a golden sash around his chest. His head and hair were white like wool,
as white as snow, and his eyes were like blazing fire. His feet were like bronze glowing in a furnace,
and his voice was like the sound of rushing waters. In his right hand he held seven stars, and out of
his mouth came a sharp double-edged sword. His face was like the sun shining in all its brilliance.
When I saw him, I fell at his feet as though dead.
Then he placed his right hand on me and said,
Do not be afraid.
I am the first and the last.
I am the living one.
I was dead.
And behold, I am alive forever and ever.
And I hold the keys of death in Hades.
Write therefore what you have seen, what is now and what will take place later.
The mystery of the seven stars that you saw in my right hand and of the seven golden lampstands is this.
The seven stars are the angels of the seven churches.
And the seven lampstands are the seven churches.
This is God's word.
There's lots of epistles and letters.
in the Bible written to churches from Paul, Peter, John, other authors. There's only one place where
there's a series of letters written directly from Jesus to the churches to us, and that's here
in the book of Revelation. And over the next seven weeks, we're going to be looking each week
at one of those letters. There's seven letters, seven churches, and seven weeks. But today,
we're going to consider the initial appearance of Jesus Christ, too, the now,
aged and elderly Apostle John on the Isle of Patmos, where he's in exile. And Jesus appears to him.
And this is quite an amazing vision. And I'd like us to take a look at three what I call
contrast, vivid contrasts. Each one tells us some important truth, some important biblical
truth that will really make a difference in our lives. One of the contrasts about
Jesus. One is about John, one's about us. And what I'll call them is, come but coming, stunned but alive,
suffering, but brilliant. Jesus has come, and yet he's coming again. John is stunned, smitten to the
ground, and yet still alive. We, the lampstands, are suffering and yet brilliant. Let's take a look at each of
these three. The first one is verse seven, and that is about the second coming of Jesus Christ.
He's come once. He was born in a manger. He lived and died. He rose again, but we're told here he's
coming again. This is the doctrine of the second coming of Jesus Christ to judge the world.
Now, liberal mainline churches over the years have felt you can't take this teaching literally.
it's only symbolic.
Jesus Christ comes again whenever Christians live good lives of love in the world.
But when you see here in verse 7 and all kinds of other places in the Bible,
it says the second coming is going to happen at one event in the future,
and it says every eye will see him.
This is not just something that comes in everybody's hearts in a kind of symbolic way.
Every eye will see him.
The conservative churches have said, yes, we take this as a real historic,
actual future event.
But the conservative churches
have tended to obsess on
when will it be?
What year will it be?
What will the signs be
so that we can predict is coming?
Now not only did Jesus
repeatedly say,
no one knows the day or the hour,
nobody knows when that's going to be.
In fact, Jesus, when he was on earth,
said even he didn't at the time know when it would be.
But to even try,
try to guess shows that you don't understand how this doctrine is supposed to really shape our lives.
So what is this doctrine?
We'll take a look here.
Look, he is coming with the clouds, and every eye will see him, even those who pierced him,
and all the peoples of the earth will mourn because of him, so may it be.
Amen.
Now, all Bible scholars over the years have said that the book of Revelation, more than
any of the New Testament book draws on Old Testament imagery. It's constantly recycling and
restating prophecies from the Old Testament, especially Daniel, Isaiah, Ezekiel, and so on.
And there's two prophecies behind this prophecy. Daniel, Chapter 7, says that the son of man will
appear in the heavens, in the clouds, and will smite the evil doers in the nations.
Zechariah chapter 12, another Old Testament prophecy, says that when the Messiah comes, they
will, they who pierced him will mourn.
But the word for mourn there in the Hebrew in Zechariah means to repent.
And therefore, a lot of Bible scholars over the years have tried to struggle with this
because here's the question, is Jesus Christ coming back to judge the nations or to convert
the nations?
see what is he coming back to smite them or to turn them and grant osborne who's written a commentary on the
book of revelation perfectly summarizes what the book of revelation is telling us about this in this
these two sentences he says he says the nations of the earth in revelation are the object of both
mission and judgment they are both to be offered the gospel of jesus christ in love
and yet warned that evil and injustice and sin will eventually be accounted for.
And therefore, quote, it is our task to participate in the former, the mission, and to let God take care of the latter, the judgment.
Now, let me tell you how important this is.
I don't believe not only that you can live a day-to-day Christian life the way you should
without understanding the doctrine the second coming of Jesus Christ to judge the world,
but I'm not even sure you can be emotionally healthy without it.
See, here's the default mode of the human heart.
We all are generally fairly blind to our own faults, and we are incredibly aware of everybody
else's.
That's how we are.
So, for example, if somebody else lies, they're liars.
And if we lie, well, that's complicated.
So we're always kind of in denial, always kind of, in other words, we're not very
aware of our own flaws, we're incredibly aware of everybody else's flaws.
That's how we all are.
This is even true, by the way, people that do beat themselves up and they say,
I suffer from low self-esteem and they hate themselves.
And yeah, well, they still, if you've never known any of them or if you are one of them,
you are just as blind to your faults as everybody else.
You're blind to your own faults and you're very aware of other people's false.
But the doctrine of the judgment day reverses that.
It completely reverses it.
Why?
Because if it's true, and it is, that Jesus Christ would come back to judge the
world at any moment and no one knows the day or hour. It could be right now. You must always, on the one hand,
be in a situation that will bear up under that irresistible light. You must always be doing
the things today right now. You must even having thoughts in your heart to say, I don't want to do
anything that if suddenly Jesus Christ would show up to judge the world, I wouldn't be embarrassed.
So you see, the judgment day on the one hand makes you very aware of yourself.
Humbles you, makes you think about your own flaws.
But on the other hand, says that it's God who will judge the rest of the world.
It's God who will do all that.
It completely reverses our ordinary character.
First of all, it makes us more aware of our own insides, and it makes us willing to say about everybody else's, look, I don't know what they deserve.
It's up to God.
Completely different.
Humbler and more gracious, instead of critical, see, and in denial.
So, for example, the idea of Judgment Day definitely makes us become more aware of our own insides.
C.S. Lewis has a great essay on this called The Worlds Last Night, taken from the famous John Dunn poem.
And here's what Lewis says. Listen to this. He's a piece out of this. He says, I can imagine no man who will look with more horror on the second coming of Jesus Christ than the conscientious revolutionary, who has sincerely been justified.
cruelties and injustices and maybe even violence inflicted on many of his contemporaries
because of the benefits he hopes to confer on future generations. Generations who, as one
terrible moment now reveals to him, we're never going to exist. You see, the doctrine of
the Second Coming teaches us that we do not and cannot know when the world drama will end.
The curtain may be rung down at any moment. Therefore, precisely because we cannot predict the moment,
we must be ready at all moments.
sometimes have the problem of trying to judge by electric lights inside how a dress or how makeup
will look by real daylight. That is very like the problem all of us have. We need to dress our souls,
not for the dim electric lights of the present world, but for the broad daylight of the next.
The good dress is the one that will face that irresistible light, that light which is so different
from the light of this world, and yet even now, we know just enough of it to take into account.
So you see, the idea of the imminent judgment of God, on the one hand, makes us say, you know,
like John Dunn, what if the present were the world's last night? Am I doing something right now that
I wouldn't be embarrassed by? How will my makeup look in the broad daylight of eternity?
On the other hand, you look at everybody else out there and all these other people,
and instead of getting angry and bitter and feeling like, whoa, why aren't they getting what they
deserve. Only God has the right to judge other people because you're not innocent. Secondly,
only God is wise enough to judge other people. You don't know what they deserve. You think you do.
You don't know a zillionth of what they've been through. You don't know anything about their past
or their background or what's going on inside. God does. So only God has the right to judge.
Only God is wise enough to judge. And only God can. He's only one that's got the reach.
And so what happens is the doctrine of judgment day turns you into a humble,
person who's gracious to everybody else. He says, I'm not sure what they deserve. God's going to
handle that. And in the end, no one's going to get away with anything. I can relax.
You know, but maybe the most fun part about this doctrine is when it says, look, he is coming
with the clouds. And all the Bible scholars have always pointed out, it doesn't say he's coming
through the clouds, like, you know, incoming and he's got to, you know, push the clouds away.
It doesn't say he's coming on the clouds, like he's riding.
it says he's bringing the clouds with him he's coming with clouds and we're not talking therefore
about moisture in the atmosphere we're talking about the clouds of god's chakana glory he's bringing
the presence of god back to heal the world of everything that's wrong with it he's bringing the
presence of god the glory of god back to get rid of all suffering and all evil and all death
and we're told that's the reason we're told that psalm 96 says that then will the tree
of the woods sing and dance and clap their hands for joy, they're going to come alive. Why? Because he comes
to judge the earth. Judge, he's coming with the clouds. Do you believe in the second coming
of Jesus Christ to judge the world, the imminent, the any moment? Do you, do you? If you do, the poise,
the joy, the graciousness, the ability to forgive, all of that flows out of it. Have you got it?
Have you got it? That's only the first point.
I should go home right now, but we have his two more.
The second thing is not so much about Jesus, though he's come, he's coming.
The second point is about John, though he's stunned, he's still alive.
What do we mean by that?
Well, when John turns around to see Jesus, what a sight.
Unbelievable.
He says literally, this must have been something for John, the beloved disciple who knew the human Jesus Christ on earth,
the incarnate human Jesus Christ, to see him like this.
But he says it was like looking right into the sun.
It was like looking into the sun.
It was like feeling a furnace at full blast.
And it was like listening to all the oceans of the world roar at once.
Tom Skinner, African-American minister, has passed away some years ago from Harlem.
And I once heard a testimony about how he came to faith in Christ.
And he says when he was a kid growing up, he went to Sunday school, but he saw Sunday school pictures of Jesus Christ.
And you know what those Sunday school pictures of Jesus looked like?
perfectly coiffed, soft focus, guy knocking at the door.
And when Tom Skinner said, growing up, he looked at those pictures and he said,
I don't know who that guy is, but all I know is he wouldn't last 10 minutes in my neighborhood.
But what about this Jesus?
This Jesus, the real Jesus.
In fact, what is the book of revel, you know what the word revelation means?
You can go to chapter one verse one.
We don't have it written down here.
You can go look at it.
It says it's the revelation of Jesus.
It's Jesus unveiled.
Jesus finally unveiled.
This Jesus, yeah, will last in that neighborhood.
As a matter of fact, the real question is, will the neighborhood last with Jesus?
And not only that, how can anybody stand before this Jesus?
And of course, we're told they can't because it says,
when I saw him, verse 17, I fell at his feet as though dead.
But you know what the operative word is, as though.
He didn't fall dead. He just felt he was dying, but he fell as if dead, and that is so significant.
Jonah is one of the most widely known stories in the Bible, but it's so much more than a simple account of a prophet who runs from God and gets swallowed by a great fish.
In his book, Rediscovering Jonah, Tim Keller uncovers the deeper message of this familiar story,
revealing how Jonah's resistance to God exposes our own reluctance to trust and obey him, and how Jonah's
experience ultimately points us to Jesus and his saving work on the cross. During the month of
May, we'll send you a copy of rediscovering Jonah as our thanks for your gift to help Gospel in Life
share the transforming love of Christ with more people. So request your copy today at gospelandlife.com
slash give. That's gospelonlife.com slash give. Now, here's Dr. Keller with the rest of today's
teaching. All of the descriptions of Jesus Christ in this wonderful vision, if we went through them,
almost phrase by phrase, you could pick every single one of them out of the Old Testament. As I said
before, Revelation is more rooted in the Old Testament than any other New Testament book.
But every single one of the descriptors of Jesus Christ is taken from some description of a vision
of God himself in the Old Testament. There's actually no place in the Bible making a stronger
a claim of the absolute supreme deity of Jesus Christ and then these verses.
See?
In other words, you go to Daniel 7, you go to Ezekiel 43, you go to Isaiah 11, you see all
these descriptions of the Lord God, and here they are describing Jesus.
But the most of all, most important of all, is when it says his face was like the sun
shining in all its brilliance.
And boy, what does that mean?
Here's one thing we know.
If you look right, if you take your eyes and you look, you set them right on the
sun shining in all this brilliance, you'll never see another thing the rest of your life.
It'll burn your retinas out. And God over and over again in the Old Testament said,
no man or woman can look upon my face and live. It is death to see my face.
And yet here, on the one hand, is Jesus Christ's face shining with the glory of God,
shining with the fatal brilliance of God.
And yet, not only is John not killed, though smitten to the ground, he's stunned,
but Jesus himself touches him and says, don't be afraid.
In January chapter 10, there is a place where the prophet Daniel has a vision of God,
and God appears to him, and actually he looks exactly like this.
Commentators for years have noticed that when God shows up,
up, the Lord Jehovah, Yahweh, shows up in Daniel chapter 10, and Daniel sees him, he looks very much
like Jesus here. And we're told that Daniel falls to the ground, you know, as dead.
But we're also told in that chapter, an angel comes and touches him, an angel puts his hand on his
shoulder, an angel says, don't be afraid, an angel comforts him, an angel tells him more.
The Lord Yahweh himself can't do that, that would be fatal, and yet here we have.
the claim that Jesus Christ is Yahweh himself, is the Lord himself, is the supreme deed of himself,
and he has the chican of glory coming out of his face, and yet it's Jesus who touches.
Jesus who comforts, and John is not killed. He's stunned but so alive. You know why that's so
significant? To understand the significance, you've got to go look at John, you have to look at Genesis
2, and then Isaiah 6, and then come back here to Revelation 1 and draw a line through them, and
then you'll see, what a story. In Genesis 2, you'll see, what a story. In Genesis 2, you have to look at Genesis 2,
Genesis 2, we're told we were built for the face of God.
In Genesis 2, we're taught in the Garden of Eden that all the love you've ever looked for in all other relationships,
all of the assurance of your significance and your value that you've been seeking in all of your life pursuits,
and all the beauty that you have sought in landscapes or places or art or music or people.
All the beauty, all the significance, all love is in his face.
Psalm 16 says in his face there is fullness of joy
everything you've ever wanted is there why because he's the alpha and he's the omega
what does that mean you were built by him and you were built for him you're built for him
all the other loves all the other beauties all the other pursuits are the crumbs compared to
that you're built for the face and the presence of god to bask in that presence to behold that
presence to love that presence to adore and praise him in his presence
is to your soul what water is to a dying fish. It's life itself. And there's no substitute for it.
But then you go scroll to Isaiah 6. In Isaiah 6, we have the prophet Isaiah being ushered into the presence of God.
And even though he never actually sees his face, that would be fatal, just getting even near his feet,
just even getting near his presence, his agony, it's pain, it's traumatic. And Isaiah says,
I'm coming apart. I'm going to die. Now, wait a minute.
How could the thing that we most need be the thing that we most fear?
How could the thing that we most need to live in its undiluted form be the one thing that can actually destroy us?
How could that be?
It's sin.
Do you understand the conundrum here?
What is sin?
Sin is that aspect of our heart that makes us want to center everything on ourselves instead of God.
We do things.
We might love God and do things for God, but everything is centered on us.
us. We'll do things if they make us happy. If they further our interests, if they make us feel good
about ourselves. Our self-image, our life, everything is based on us. And so we base our self-image not on God.
We base our sense of worth, not on God, but on am I a good person or a decent person or a cool,
hip person, or an accomplished person? And anybody with a self-image built like that, as sin does make
us build it, cannot stay in the presence of superlativness. If you think you're smart and you're really
proud of being smart and it's very important to you and you get near somebody who's 10 times smarter
than you it doesn't feel good same thing with athletic prowess same thing with looks same thing with money
same thing with anything you suddenly you don't feel good you don't like it why it's your self-image being
crushed by the weight of the person's superlativness and if we feel that way about human superlativness
what is it like to come into the presence of god it's decimating it's incinerating
It's agonizing.
To fix your heart on being your own master and then come into the presence of the ultimate true master is death.
For a human being, a sinful human being to get into the presence of God is death.
No man can look upon my face and live, and yet I'm built to look on his face, and yet I can't look on his face.
By the way, this explains everything about the human race, all of its conundrums, all of its paradoxes.
But now suddenly, in Revelation 1, something has happened.
something has happened because in Daniel chapter 10 when the Lord appears and his prophet falls to the
ground as dead somebody else has to touch him God can't touch him but here it's the Lord himself
whose face is shining touches him and says don't be afraid how can this be and the answer is
let's go back to the first point secular people say there is no judgment day evil and suffering
you're never really going to be resolved.
Conservative people say,
yes, there is a judgment day
and you better be really good, really, really good.
But the gospel says,
the judge at the end of time
entered history in the middle of time
and took our judgment for us.
He says, don't be afraid.
What? I was dead.
Don't be afraid. I have the keys of death in hell.
Hades. I died for you.
I went to hell for you.
I was judged for you.
So now you can have a touch.
so now you can be comforted.
So now you can live in my presence.
And bit by bit by bit, even in this world, get more and more use for the joy of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.
That's pretty significant.
So do you see the doctrine of the second coming of Jesus Christ to judge the world?
And you see the fact that through what Jesus Christ did, you have been now admitted into the presence of
God and that is your future, but there's one more thing that we're told here. The third contrast
is suffering but brilliant, and that you see actually in verse 13. What are the lampstands?
The lampstands are the churches, and we're the churches. It's actually a fine image that we'll
get back to when we go through these letters. The idea that we are, Redeemer is a church,
we are a lampstand and that means we are to be God's light in a dark world.
It's a great idea, great illustration.
But the important thing that you get to know in the book of Revelation is that these
churches are going through suffering.
You know, the first hymn that we sang, we come across to you,
I chose this as a hymn for us to sing in the early days of Redeemer.
And it was written by Margaret Clarkson for the Urban Amissions Conferences.
and that's the reason why the last verse has,
we worship you, Lord Christ, our Savior and our King,
to you our youth and strength adoringly we bring.
And I've been singing this for years,
and I've been singing even as I'm getting older and older
and have less and less youth and strength to give.
We're still a really young church,
and it's still quite a right, you know,
we're one of the younger churches you'll find anywhere.
On the other hand, it strikes me
that as John is right,
writing this book, he's an old man now, the fact of the matter is the older you get, the more suffering
you see, the more suffering you know about, the less sanguine you are about life. Not only the more
suffering you felt, but the more of your friends have been through it, and the older you get,
the more you realize life is hard, then you die. And here is John, in exile in the Al of Patmos,
here is John, knowing the churches that he's ministered to are going to be going through
some incredible persecution, some of it's named in the book of Revelation.
You know what some of those things were? Some Christians are going to be impaled on a pole
covered with pitch and lit while still alive. Some Christians are going to be thrown to the lions.
Some Christians, there's going to be such masses of Christians crucified at once that they're
going to line the roads in and out of Rome so travelers can watch people die as they go on vacation.
Some people are going to have holes drilled in their skull and molten metal poured in while
still alive. And in the midst of these beaten,
bloodied, battered people, this magnificent figure is walking. Verse 13, he's in the middle of the
lampstands. And he's walking as if he's in a furnace. And by the way, affliction is often called
a furnace in the Bible. And you know what? There's no way you can have, you can't study this
passage. The book of Revelation, almost every verse reminds you of Daniel. And not at this point be
reminded of Daniel chapter 3. Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, believers wouldn't worship the emperor,
just like these people, and they were thrown into a furnace. And the furnace was so hot
that even the men who were throwing them into the furnace died in the process. And so the king,
Nebuchadnezzar, looks into the furnace and expecting to see, you know, maybe a hand like this
and a few bodies incinerating. He says he sees got men walking around, not consumed by the fire.
But even though they only threw three in, he sees a fourth man in there, four walking around,
and the fourth one is like a son of God.
That's what the text says.
And this is God's way of making good on his promise in Isaiah 43.
Fear not, I have redeemed you.
I have called you by name.
Fear not.
You are mine.
When you pass through the waters, I'll be there.
And when you walk through the fire, you will not be burned.
Neither shall the flame kindle upon you, for I am the Lord.
Lord. Now what did that mysterious figure in the flames in Daniel 3 mean? Now we know what it means.
You know what? Look, when Jesus Christ says, I have the keys to death in hell, Hades, what does he mean?
I went into the fire. Our God doesn't just look at us in the furnace of affliction and feel bad for us and feel sympathy.
Our God actually, in the form of Jesus Christ, came into this world and on the cross was plunged into the ultimate
furnace. The ultimate furnace, what you've been looking at is the judgment of God. The ultimate
furnace is the loss of the face of the father. It's a disintegration. It's the agony. He went into
the ultimate furnace. Hell. He got the ultimate persecution, the ultimate suffering. He is literally
walking in the furnace with us. But actually, think it this way, until you see that Jesus Christ
took the ultimate furnace for you, he actually won't be walking with you in your penultimate
furnace is with you. If you see he walked in the ultimate furnace for you, then you will know
he's with you in your penultimate furnaces. And in your penultimate furnaces, not going to hell,
but the rejections and the debts and the physical problems that you are facing, you will find
that the flame will not kindle on you, but instead you'll be refined. You'll become beautiful.
You become brilliant like him. It'll be refined like gold. Well, how does it?
work, it's actually not that hard, and yet it's very hard. Do you believe that Jesus Christ
took the ultimate furnace for you? Do you believe he did all this? Now, then tell yourself this.
The ultimate furnace is gone. The ultimate debt is paid. The great love that I'm looking for
in my life is actually waiting for me, and the ultimate wealth is in my account eternally.
And if you know this, and to the degree you know this, and to the degree you grasp this,
all other debts, all other afflictions, all other rejections are small by comparison and you can walk
in your suffering and find instead of it making you more bitter and more angry and more awful,
instead it'll make you wiser and better and deeper and kinder because you'll say,
I can face this for you, Jesus, because it's nothing compared to what you face for me.
Roger Kipling says, what should they know of England who only England know?
What does he mean?
What should they know of England who own England?
What he's saying is if you really want to understand your country, you need to get out of your country.
So if you live your whole life in your country, there's too much about it that you can't see.
You don't understand your own culture.
It says if you want to really get into your country, first get out of your country, get some perspective.
We know what the Bible is trying to say?
He is the alpha.
If you want to get into yourself, if you want to understand yourself, you've got to get out of yourself.
You've got to start with him.
Or better yet.
Get out of your suffering.
get out of yourself pity.
Get out of looking at yourself and saying,
oh, why, why, why, why, and get into his
and see what he did.
And if you get out of your own
into his, you will find, you'll understand your own
and your own won't consume you.
It won't incinerate you.
It'll beautify you.
It'll polish you.
For after all, Jesus said to Paul,
not to John,
my power is made perfect in weakness.
My power is made perfect in weakness.
Let's pray.
Our Father, the images of Revelation are so dizzying and so can be confusing.
But as we sit and think and ponder together what you are saying to us in this book,
we see you are saying it doesn't matter how bad things are.
I'm in charge.
You're in my hand.
I'm in your midst.
I'm there with you.
I'll strengthen thee, help thee, and cause thee to stand upheld by my righteous omnipotent hand.
We pray, Father, that you would help us to grasp these great doctrines about what your son did
in order to open the way to your face and presence and love.
How you are going to come back and judge all things and how you're with us in our furnaces of affliction.
We pray that you would just help us to apply these things by the Holy Spirit.
We ask it in Jesus' name.
Amen.
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Today's sermon was recorded in 2008.
The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017
while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.
