Verses 1–8
The Marriage of the Lamb
Revelation 19:1. The first words, “after these things”, introduce a new part, which at the same time directly connects to what is previously said. When the judgment over Babylon has been fully taken place, an enormous response comes from heaven. All who are in heaven form an awesome choir and express as out of one mouth their great joy about God and His judgment over Babylon. The first word that John hears is “hallelujah!” For the first time in the book and in the whole New Testament you hear this word sounding. So it is sparingly used.
The word means ‘praise Jahweh’ and is therefore an appeal to worship God. Worship always has a cause. If you learn something of Whom God is, concerning His works and His ways and you are impressed by it, when it moves your heart, it causes you to worship Him. This is what happened, for example to Abraham when God told him about His plans with him and Sarah (Genesis 17:17). Worship is not the experience of having lofty feelings through music with ecstatic expressions.
The word appears four times in Revelation 19:1-Joshua : and not anywhere else. In the Old Testament the word appears more often and especially in the Bible book of Psalms. There it is always spoken out on the earth, while here it is said in heaven. The first time you find it in Psalm 104:35. Psalm 104 speaks prophetically about the millennial kingdom. Here in Revelation 19 the time has come that the millennial kingdom is established and a visible content is given to ‘hallelujah’.
God is being honored and praised as the One to Whom “salvation” belongs. The point here is the coming of the ultimate and full salvation of everything that He Himself had planned to save (1 Peter 1:5). In that salvation His “glory” and His “power” become visible. This is the salvation that He has worked with the power which is His own.
Revelation 19:2. There is absolutely no doubt that His judgments are ”true” and ”righteous”. This goes for all judgments, but these characteristics are specifically praised with a view to the judgment over “the great harlot”. The word ‘harlot’ stresses again her unfaithfulness which was great and deep. His truthfulness and righteousness become very clear in the judgment over her who has sinned in such a general and specifically horrible way.
She “was corrupting the earth” as a whole, all men on it, “with her immorality” and she has made especially God’s “bond-servants” to be a target of her wickedness. She deserves the judgment in all areas. With the judgment because of her abuse of God’s servants, God answers the supplication of the martyrs in chapter 6:10, who asked Him to avenge on her their blood. The day of vengeance has come (Isaiah 61:2).
Revelation 19:3. For the second time God is being worshiped; this time because the judgment remains “forever and ever” and there will never be a repeat of the performance of the great harlot ever more. “Her smoke” is the smoke of the great harlot. The rising up of the smoke indicates that this judgment is a permanent remembrance (cf. Isaiah 34:8-2 Samuel :). A smoke that rises up to God speaks of the satisfaction that God’s love and holiness find in the judgment. You see that in the sacrifices that speak of Christ. With relation to the judgment over the ungodly, only an eternal punishment fulfills God’s holiness.
Revelation 19:4. The elders and the living creatures are mentioned here for the last time (the first time was in chapter 4:4). They fall down before God to worship Him as Judge. They have also fallen down to Him as Creator (Revelation 4:4) and as Savior (Revelation 5:14). The judgment over Babylon is the cause to express themselves in an “amen, hallelujah” (Psalms 106:48). The ‘amen’ is a confirmation of the judgments, which is to underline them. The ‘hallelujah’ draws the attention again to God as the One Who is worthy of being worshiped.
Revelation 19:5. Now “a voice came from the throne”. All judgments have always come out from the throne. With the judgment over the great harlot a point has been reached that the throne can make an appeal to praise God. Everything that God does will be for the glory and praise of His Name. Everything that He says and does reflects His glorious features. And everything that is visible of God causes all who hear Him to praise Him. That also goes for His judgments. His judgments prove His righteousness, one of His many impressive characteristics.
The throne, the symbol of God’s government, appeals to “all … His bond-servants” to praise Him. It is an appeal to all who have served Him faithfully on earth, whether they have been ‘small or great’ therein. They have served Him with the fear of God. This fear is not scare, but respect.
Revelation 19:6. For the third time John hears a voice. It is the voice that reminds him of three things: “a great multitude … many waters and … mighty peals of thunder”. It is not an unordered mixture of sounds, like a busy market place with screaming people and honking cars. There is harmony in the ‘great multitude’. The ‘many waters’ indicate an impressive and irresistible power. The ‘mighty peals of thunder’ are the all dominating messengers that accompany the acceptance by God of His kingship.
The great multitude here includes all heavenly citizens, apart from the church that will be mentioned in the next verse. For the last time the “hallelujah” sounds and this time in relation to the acceptance by God of His kingship. He has started to reign, a government which He exercises by His Son.
Revelation 19:7. The mighty choir of voices with a multiple sound cries out to itself to be happy and to rejoice and to give God glory. The reason is that “the marriage of the Lamb has come”. This happy event is on God’s schedule. Now the false bride, the great harlot, has been judged, the time has come for the wedding of His Son.
Prior to the coming of the millennial kingdom of peace, the wedding has to take place first. Then the bride can on the side of the Bridegroom follow Him publicly in order to reign with Him. That is actually God’s intention. Though it is remarkable that it is His wedding, for with every wedding on earth the attention is drawn to the bride. Here it is different. All attention is paid to Him.
The bride is here called “His wife”. Yet she remains to be the bride (Revelation 21:2) forever. She is wife and bride (Revelation 21:9). That she is forever bride means that she will keep the glory as bride for the heart of the Lord Jesus forever. Therefore she will never put off her wedding robe. She is arrayed in it and “has made herself ready” to be His wife. The next verse describes what her robe consists of.
Revelation 19:8. The robe consists of “the righteous acts of the saints”. There is nothing unrighteous on that robe. Though, you may say: the saints have also committed unrighteous deeds, not only righteous ones, haven’t they? Exactly because of that the judgment seat of Christ is that important (Romans 14:10; 2 Corinthians 5:10). As soon as the church has been caught up, your life, and the life of every believer, will be judged in all its particularities in God’s light. You will appear there in a glorified body and therefore it cannot possibly have anything to do with eternal judgment. The Judge is no one else than your Savior, Who gave His life for you. How could you possibly still perish?
The appearance before the judgment seat is intended for you to be brought into agreement with God’s judgment about your life. You will then be able to know as you have been known (1 Corinthians 13:12). You first need to know how you have been judged by the Lord, in order to be able to judge or reign over other people. Everything you have done in the body, will be revealed, even all the motives of your heart (1 Corinthians 4:5). You only will love Him even more by that (cf. Luke 7:47).
Maybe you will see righteous acts in the robe of which you did not think that they were righteous acts. Conversely, things may be absent of which you thought them to be an important contribution to the robe. The question for you and me is now: To what extent do I contribute to the beauty of that robe? Will there probably be acts that will be consumed by the fire (1 Corinthians 3:15), which will cause that there will be nothing left for the robe?
When we speak about our righteous acts, then we speak about the side of our responsibility. Through our deeds we do or do not contribute to the robe. But there is also the other side, which is the side of God’s grace that has worked in us, so that we may do good deeds. In a song it is written: ‘Whatever good that we have done, it was all achieved through Your grace.’ That reflects well what is written here, that the robe has been “given” to her. That proves to you that everything you have contributed to that robe is ultimately the work of God’s grace.
When the bride appears on the scene, her brilliance will be great. What she wears has been given by God. What she shows are the purity and cleanness of God Himself (cf. Ezekiel 16:14). “Fine linen” is a precious textile, more precious than the linen with which the angels are clothed (Revelation 15:6). Mind the contrast with the robe of the great harlot (Revelation 17:4; Revelation 18:16).
Now read Revelation 19:1-8 again.
Reflection: In which way do you contribute to the wedding robe?