When the bride of Christ lives out of an eschatological hope that looks forward to the new heaven and earth, to her long-awaited wedding day, and to her home in a new creation temple, she prays. Strikingly, this is where the book of Revelation ends. In Revelation 22, we find two distinct prayers of Christ’s bride… the first prayer of the bride of Christ is not her ultimate prayer. The prayer of the church in this present age focuses finally on her hopeful expectancy for the coming of Christ. That prayer is short, born out of a living hope: “Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!” (Rev. 22:20).
The grand story of redemption that unfolds throughout the Scriptures is a story that ends well. Unbelief may choose to regard the promise of the future triumph of the Lamb, as it is represented in the book of Revelation, to be little more than a fairy-tale ending. But for those whose faith is founded on the promises of the gospel, hope for the future—that is, eschatological hope—is securely based on the certain promise that Christ will ultimately triumph. In the language of the book of Revelation, “the Lamb who was slain” is also “the Lion from the tribe of Judah” (Rev. 5:5–6). He alone is worthy to open the seals of the scroll that contains an all-embracing script of the drama of redemption (v. 9). The last act in this drama will take place when Christ comes to usher in the new heaven and the new earth, granting to His people the fullness of their inheritance in the consummation of God’s kingdom.
Nowhere in all of Scripture is the future fulfillment of God’s promises in Christ more richly depicted than in the visions recorded in Revelation 21 and 22. The testimony that the Apostle John provides in these chapters undergirds the eager expectation of all true believers for the coming of Christ at the end of this present age. If true faith is “the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen” (Heb. 11:1), then it must produce a hopeful longing for the day when what the Apostle John saw in these symbolic visions will be fulfilled.
Though the visions of Revelation 21 and 22 are full of complex symbolism and imagery, three broad themes govern what they promise regarding the fulfillment of God’s redemptive purposes.
A New Heaven and a New Earth
The first and most obvious theme is that the history of redemption will culminate in nothing less than a “new heaven and a new earth.” In his description of the new heaven and earth in Revelation 21:1–8, the Apostle John draws on the prophecies of Isaiah 65–66: “For behold, I create new heavens and a new earth, and the former things shall not be remembered or come into mind” (Isa. 65:17; see also 66:22–23).
The “former things” are all the afflictions that the saints have endured in this life as they await the coming of their King. When Christ comes at the end of this present age, the brokenness and pain that afflict the fallen human race and the whole creation under God’s curse will be expunged forever. In the new order of things, God’s people will shed no more tears. Christ will triumph over all His and their enemies, including “the last enemy,” death itself (1 Cor. 15:26). All the sadness, sorrow, and pain that belong to the present order of things will cease. Absent the presence of sin and its consequences, God’s people will know only unending joy and delight in God’s presence. When John sees the new creation, he describes it as a place where “the sea was no more” (Rev. 21:1). The “sea” in the book of Revelation and elsewhere in Scripture symbolizes the chaos and disruption that marked the former creation under the condition of sin (see Dan. 7:3; Rev. 13:1; 15:2). However, in the new heaven and new earth, God’s reign over all things will be secure. The new world will be a peaceable and righteous kingdom, a place of perfect shalom—peace.
The vision of the new heaven and earth in the book of Revelation raises a question about the extent of the continuity or discontinuity between the “new” and the “former” orders of creation. Will the present created order be utterly destroyed and replaced with a radically new and different order? If this were the case, there would be little or no similarity between the first and the second creation. Or will the new order of things be a renewal and healing of the old order so that significant continuity remains between the present and the future creation?
Though this question is much disputed, the best answer views the new order as a renewal of creation rather than its annihilation. There are several biblical reasons that support this view.
First, the Greek word for “new” in Revelation 21:1 is also used in 2 Peter 3:13. In both instances, it refers to what is new in nature and quality but not new in the sense that it had no prior existence. In the new heaven and earth, God makes all things new, but this does not mean that He makes all new things.
Second, the analogy between the resurrection-renewal of the bodies of believers and the renewal of the creation argues for a measure of continuity. The resurrection of the body does not annihilate the body but “transforms” it into the likeness of Christ’s glorious body (Phil. 3:21). Romans 8:18–25 represents the new creation similarly as the liberation of the present creation from its bondage to decay. This liberation is one for which the whole creation longs, and it coincides with the revelation of the glorified children of God. In 2 Peter 3:13, the new heavens and earth “in which righteousness dwells” comes about through an act of God whereby the created order is refined and purified. Rather than annihilating the creation, God restores, purifies, and perfects the created order.
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