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![]() ..A Magazine for all Christians · Nº 16 · July - August 2002 |
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There is an unmovable throne established in heaven, from which our walk and service is continually evaluated. If we come closer to him today in search of his help, we won't run away terrified in the hour of judgment. Gonzalo
Sepúlveda H. The Vision of God's Throne
The apostle John
writes to us as an order expressed by the glorious Lord Jesus Christ,
with whom he had the exquisite privilege of meeting during his exile to
the Island of Patmos. In the first chapter
of Revelation, verse 10, John says that he was in the Spirit when he heard
a voice like a trumpet and he says the same thing again here in the fourth
chapter verse 2. This teaches us that we must also be in the same Holy
Spirit in order to be able to understand something of these celestial
things, which would be impossible to comprehend with the limited resources
of human intelligence. Therefore, we commend ourselves to the Lord so
that he would illuminate them to us. The Old Testament
records a great number of men's experiences; those who had a personal
encounter with God, whether before his throne of glory or in other forms.
Such an experience, without a doubt, transformed their lives forever.
Such is the case, for example, of Abraham and the heavenly visitations
(Genesis.14:17-20 and 17:1-8), of Jacob in Bethel and in Peniel (Genesis.28:10-22
and 32:24-31), of Moses in Median before the burning bush (Exodus 3:1-10),
and of Joshua in front of the man with the drawn sword (Joshua.5:13-15).
There are an abundance of examples, but the experience of Isaiah is unique.
"In the year
that king Uzziah died, I saw the Lord seated on a throne, high and exalted..."
(Isaiah 6:1-7). Here there is no mention of it being a dream, or a mystical
voice coming from a burning bush or anything like that. It simply states
that it was a terrifying and traumatic experience for the prophet. He
exclaims with desperation, Woe to me! and considered himself: a priori
to be dead because the vision was so terrible: A sinful man faced before
the only true, Holy, Holy, Holy God Almighty!... Isaiah however is saved
thanks to God himself through a seraph. The word from Revelation
mentioned at the beginning speaks to us of "a throne established
in heaven." Let us agree that there are not two, or more, thrones:
there is a single eternal and unmovable throne established in heaven,
and upon this throne is seated the only true God, the God and Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, the throne that Isaiah saw is the same
one that John saw! However, there is a great contrast between the prophet
and the apostle's reactions. While the first one
falls down in a desperate state, the second is so serene, so sure and
confident, as if the most normal thing for a man to see, hear, admire
and praise, is his God seated on his glorious throne. Let us understand
the prophet Isaiah's situation. Even though the time of development for
God's redemptive purpose was still far off, Isaiah becomes, for just an
instant, the figure of a sinner without repentance and who is also associated
with an unclean generation before God's eyes. As for John, let us
consider his previous experiences. He met Jesus in the days of his incarnation;
he followed him from the first encounter until the foot of the cross.
He was even a witness of the empty tomb, and he could touch the resurrected
Lord. He received the fire of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost;
he lived in the genesis of the church in Jerusalem and served faithfully
alongside the rest of the apostles until being persecuted and exiled for
his faith. Now, when he sees the "Son of Man" again in Revelation
1, although he falls as though dead at his feet, it is not because he
felt like an unclean sinner. Rather, it is because of the uncontainable
astonishment of once again seeing, with his own eyes, Jesus in whose breast
he had reclined many times. From the day of His ascension on the Mount
of Olives, John could no longer hear his sweet voice nor feel the loving
hands that he had once touched. The emotion is absolutely uncontainable.
Before those eyes, now like blazing fire, before those feet, that voice,
in short, before such glory, he simply falls at his feet as though dead.
What do these things
mean or what does the Lord want to say to us through this? We who, even
in the limitations of this physical body, surrounded by an incredulous
world and a lukewarm and halting Christianity, should never lose the vision
of the throne of our God! Let us remember that
such a throne continues to be established in heaven, and it will never
be removed. "The Lord has established his throne in heaven and his
kingdom rules over all." (Psalm 103:19), "Your throne, oh God,
will last for ever and ever" (Psalm. 45:6), "Your throne was
established long ago; you are from all eternity." (Psalm. 93:2) All
judgment that comes upon the earth has to be decided before this throne.
From there the decision was taken to create all that exists and from there
salvation was also decided. The resurrected Lord also ascended there,
after having completed his work, to occupy the place next to the Father
which he had shared from before the foundation of the world. Today, in
Revelation 5:6, we see him in the center of the throne, as a slain Lamb.
All our walk and service is continually evaluated upon this throne. Hagar
referred to God as "The One who sees me", on the day when her
anguish was relieved. (Genesis.16:13-14). The Lord sees us, brothers and
sisters. He knows when we seek him (Psalm 14:2), and if we serve him from
the heart and if we truly invoke him. God cannot be deceived. In our days, men live
with a guilty indifference regarding the authority of God, as if they
will never have to be face to face with Him! In Revelation 6:12-17
an event is described that is yet to happen: the most important people
in the earth will hide in the caves and call out to the rocks of mountains
to fall on them and hide them from the face of Him who sits on the throne!
The hour of truth will arrive sooner rather than later, then all who deliberately
forgot (2 Peter 3:5) the power and the Deity who lives for ever and ever
will be faced with that same throne of God and they won't be able to withstand
the glory of his face. Today the rebels,
the unbelievers, the Gnostics, the humanists whose religion is nothing
more than the exaltation of man, and those that have decided to honor
the created things rejecting their Creator (Romans.1:25), still have their
freedom. However,... (how terrible is this "However"!) soon
all these "opinion leaders" that fill the covers of the press
and that are acclaimed by the multitudes, all the famous people of our
time, all, all who have rejected the salvation that God has freely offered
them in Christ will call out in great voices to the rocks of the mountains
so that they cover them! For then there will no longer be a place for
regret; but only a fearful expectation of judgment. (Hebrews. 10:27) If
there is anything which is impossible in our universe, it is to seek to
escape unpunished after having rejected the authority and the salvation
of He who sits on that throne! Let us continue now
to consider the multitude in Revelation 7:9. They are also before the
throne and in the presence of the Lamb, but contrary to the previous multitude,
these are filled with joy. Instead of fright they have a great confidence;
they have palms in their hands and worshiped in a loud voice. They don't
run away ashamed, rather they celebrate an eternal salvation granted by
grace, through the blood of the Lamb. This multitude didn't reject the
Crucified One, they didn't make fun of the gospel; they believed it! Have
you believed it? Have you confessed that you are a sinner unworthy of
being near the Lord? Have you repented of your sins? Have you received
Christ in your heart? If the answer is yes, then you belong to this multitude
and you have nothing to fear when the day of facing the throne of our
God and Father arrives. We have often emphasized
the beautiful truth of Christ revealed in our hearts (Colossians.1:27;
Gal.1:16; 2:20; Ephesians.3:17; etc.) and we will continue valuing this
as a great treasure. We have seen that all hope of pleasing the Lord that
saved us depends on this being a real experience in each believer, learning
thus, how to live in Christ and for Christ in all their earthly pilgrimage.
However, because of our human weakness one usually finds cases in which
a brother neglects his communion with the Lord, he becomes lazy and negligent,
and grieves the Holy Spirit in his heart, and, therefore, his life and
his service to the Lord finish in a shameful failure. In the face of such
a possibility, it is urgent for believers to never lose the vision of
the throne of God. Although our heart is deceitful (Jeremiah.17:9-10),
we should know that the throne of God is unmovable. In the earth things
can vary; doubts can assault our soul, our emotions can betray us, but
the throne of God does not change like the shifting shadows. (James 1:17).
"Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to
whom we must give account." (Hebrews.4:13). Revelation 22:1-5
shows us an extremely consoling scene with regard to the throne of God
and the Lamb. It says that "His servants will serve him. They will
see his face"... Without terror, without judgment, without any fear,
but rather with an indescribable and glorious joy. The expectation of
contemplating the face of our Great beloved moves us to tears. This will
be our prize, our supreme reward. This is the indescribable glory that
awaits those who in time have persevered in the Lord, who have given him
their heart, they serve him, they love him and they wait for his coming.
All suffering will have ended. The road that we begin without strength
on the day that we convert to Christ has its goal and its end here. Then
we will say that it was worthwhile to live, work, suffer and even to die
for Christ. How important it is to know this; let us emphasize this with
the greatest energy: We won't ever be defrauded there! Let us live today
with our faces towards the throne of our beloved God and the Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ, even though now we see only in part. (1 Corinthians
13:12), let us approach the throne of grace with confidence. Blessed is
the Name of our Lord because we can already do this, continually, without
any restriction. This is, being the same throne that Isaiah saw, and the
same one that is described in different ways in Revelation, the "throne
of grace" for those that are in Christ. We can go there confidently,
without any fear, and always find the mercy that lifts us up and the grace
that helps us to live a life worthy of the calling we have received. (Hebrews
4:16; Ephesians 4:1) *** |