4b Grace to you and peace from him who is and who was and who is to come, and from
the seven spirits who are before his throne, 5 and from Jesus Christ, the faithful
witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To him
who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood, 6 and made us to be a kingdom,
priests serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever.
Amen. 7 Look! He is coming with the clouds; every eye will see him, even those who
pierced him; and on his account all the tribes of the earth will wail. So it is to be.
Amen. 8 'II am the Alpha and the Omega,' says the Lord God, who is and who was and
whois to come, the Almighty.
Step 1: Initial Diagnosis (External Problem) - See the Tribes Snarl
The tribes (v. 7) are us. Lest any be in pretentious first-world doubt about this,
try the following thought experiment: an Oval Office counselor, addressing a crowd
of Protestant evangelicals, sprinkles his remarks with echoes of this text and so
gets caught on tape extolling the world's Christocratic destiny (v. 6; "dominion" =
Gk. kratos, as in aristo-crat, demo-crat, etc.). Pressed to disavow his advisor's
comments, the President refuses. Who can doubt what happens next? Headlines shriek.
Pundits rant. Demonstrators mass at the White House gates. Within the churches
millions applaud and millions wince, all piously, with the veneer of theological
conviction, and all hypocritically, the applauding and wincing arising not nearly so
much from thought and theology as from the deeper reflexes of socioeconomic alignment
and cultural identity. Precisely so do we manifest the tribal instincts of our
ancestors, which we have not lost. It's as if to be human is to cluster and contend,
group against group, the groups defined only sometimes by blood and ancestry, always by
a common interest in exercising that dominion over other creatures which is part and
parcel of the skewed image of God we continue to bear When that dominion is threatened
we bare our fangs, collectively. In Jesus' own end time visions the wailing of v. 7
is always accompanied by the gnashing of teeth. One might say, then, that the future
is now.
Step 2: Advanced Diagnosis (Internal Problem) - See the Tribes Quake
In the experiment above, why are Christian mainliners leagued in a sort of super-tribe
with left-wing agnostics? Because both dread the dominion, not of Christ, but of
Bible-beating Southern Baptists. For their part the Baptists will swallow hard and
embrace Pat Buchanan Catholics if only to keep the lefties at bay. The key ingredient
on both sides of the contest is fear; and as Scripture everywhere attests, fear of
anything other than God is a failure of faith in God (for but two examples among
hundreds see Mk. 4:40, Rev. 13:4). In this post-Easter age the God we don't believe or
trust is the God who, in Christ, "freed us from our sins by his blood" (v. 5b).
Consider that assertion. Who gives it the credit it deserves and demands? Not
agnostics, nor the otherly-religioned. But then neither do Christians. Why else
the intra-tribal rivalries? Why else the blind certainty of both mainline and
evangelical that a dominion of the other entails the beastly prospect (ch. 13) of
domination by the other? So also with the older contests, Orthodox vs. Catholic,
Catholic vs. Protestant, Lutheran vs. Reformed, etc. Common to all is an assumption
that the other tribe is a band of Satan's slaves, abounding in sin, murder, and sundry
wickedness. Of some tribes on earth this is assuredly true as the slaughters of the
past century attest. But to think it true of all tribes, and worse, to assume it of
sub-tribes which, like one's own, bear the sign of "the faithful witness," is to mock
that witness. This is one way--there are countless more--by which we pierce Christ anew
with our unbelief (v. 7).
Step 3: Advanced Diagnosis (Eternal Problem) - Hear the Tribes Lament
Hence the wailing that is bound to erupt from every throat when Christ appears in
his glory. There is no exclusion here for Christian throats, and for several
reasons. First, to see him in that day is to see Power as Power has never been seen
before; for he comes openly, nakedly, as "ruler of the kings of the earth" (v. 5), as
enveloping, all-containing Alpha and Omega of every power ever exercised since
creation's dawn. He comes, in a word, as Pantocrat, that straight turning of the
Greek which brings fresh oomph to the stale English"Almighty" (v. 8). The very sight
is bound to cow and awe and elicit terror, all the more when, second, it instantly
exposes the absurdity of those tribal configurations to which sinners keep clinging
for strength and safety. Now each is out in the open--each Christian too--one by one
encountering the fullness of deity, righteous and irresistible, from whom flight and
concealment are options no longer. This One, third, has bones to pick, beginning
not with the heathen but with his churches (2:1 - 3:22). Those bones include our
failure to love each other (2:4) and our shabby alliances (2:14-15). Anyone ever
faced by this Power and Judgment Unmasked, if only in a vision, has fallen down dead
or the next thing thereto It happened to Isaiah (Is. 6), to shepherds in the field
(Lk. 2), to Peter (Lk. 5), to Saul of Tarsus (Acts 9), to John of Patmos (1:17). It
will happen to us.
Step 4: Initial Prognosis (Eternal Solution) - Post-Tribal Life
Now comes the great surprise. The One who will scare us each to death--justifiably
so--will also love us each (v. 5b) into brand new life, and again justifiably, He
Himself having underwritten the justice of it. Recall heaven's own verdict: "Worthy
is the Lamb who was slaughtered" to receive anything and everything he desires
(5:12). If that includes a desire to give life to the unworthy and the rightfully
dead, so be it; with right and might like his who can argue? Notice now his right
hand on the shoulder of John of Patmos (1:17). What is this if not the promise of
that same hand on my shoulder and yours? "I was dead" he will say (1:18), not
bothering to add that he died on our account. How so? Because ours were the hands
that, in piercing him, unwittingly enabled him to lay his own hands on "the keys of
Death and of Hades" (1:18), the very things he was born and crucified to acquire.
Having gotten them he will turn them on our behalf, to our everlasting benefit.
"Don't be afraid," he tells us (1:17). How can we be? For however breathtaking is
his power, more breathtaking by far is the grace (v. 4) with which he wields it--and
not for our one-on-one sake only, or for our particular tribe, but for the sake of
"every tribe and language and people and nation" (5:9).
Step 5: Advanced Prognosis (Internal Solution) - Post-Tribal Liberty
This said--or more to the point, this believed, what left to fear? Assume for a
moment that our worst suspicions of the tribal other should happen to be true (they
aren't, but play along anyway): that mainliners, for example, are nothing more than
Communists in drag, or that evangelicals are busy plotting to turn all America into
Calvin's joyless Geneva, no dissenters allowed. Can either extremity, coming to pass,
void the ultimate extreme of Christ's power and mercy? To know Christ is to know the
answer. But to know Christ is also to understand that we rightly speak of him not
only in past and future tenses, but in the present tense as well (v. 4b, 8). This means
that we live even now under the quiet dominion of Christocracy-in-the-making. Even
now he flexes his might, wondrously, through incessant initiatives of grace and peace
(v. 4b). Finding us to be sinners, he declares us to be saints--and treats us
accordingly. When people trust this they start to mimic it, loving the erstwhile enemy
not only as Christ has loved us but, better still, as Christ still loves them. Then
the word "he freed us from our sins" gets preached in the flesh and blood of real
deeds and genuine attitudes; and a whiff of ultimate liberty starts wafting through
the world.
Step 6: Final Prognosis (External Solution) - The Post-Tribal Anthem
Essential to this liberty is a brand new understanding of what wise politics and the
ultimate political order are all about. Be it underscored in all the churches that
Christ calls us to embrace this understanding with gusto. Christocracy is not a
gruesome threat but a wild, wonderful promise, a regime of mighty grace and everlasting
peace. It falls presently to some--those who know and trust Jesus--to make this
plain. To that end Christ "has made to be a kingdom, priests serving his God and
Father." So writes the seer (v. 6), echoing Peter (1 Pet. 2:5, 9), who in turn has
filled an Old Testament text (Ex. 19:6) with Christian content. From many tribes he
makes one kingdom. Out of many "thems" he forms a single, priestly "us" whose
function is to serve as we ourselves have been served, sacrificially, so as to convey
God's mercy in Christ to those who need it. This is what priests do--all priests,
i.e. the baptized, not merely the ordained. To tribal neighbors they are little
Christs. In those same tribal neighbors they find Christ. So they eschew snarling.
Instead they fill the present with the song of the future, the anthem of kingdom come:
Worthy is the Lamb...whose dominion is never domination, but always grace and peace and
love in doses strong enough to keep us brimming with life and joy forever. It's a
catchy song—so catchy that out of every tribe there are some who sing it already. If
only we'll listen. If only on hearing we'll sing along.
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