Interpretation 12

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Jeanie C. Crain http://crain.english.missouriwestern.edu

 

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Revelation 12–13

Victory in heaven, disaster for earth—Antichrist and false prophet (Matthew 24.15–24)

If chapter eleven marks a significant first half of Revelation, ending vision and beginning the tableaux of conflict and triumph, the awful Day of God's judgment, then it is not surprising to being chapter twelve with a great portent appearing in heaven: "a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars" (1). This is followed by yet another portent: "a great red dragon, with seven heads and ten horns, and seven diadems on his heads" (3). Structurally, the chapter can be divided into two main parts: first, we have the birth of a child "to rule all the nations...snatched away and taken to God" (5) followed by a battle between celestial powers--those of Michael and his angels against the dragon and the downfall of the dragon (12.7-12); in the second main division, the dragon pursues the woman and her other earthly children (12.13-17).

Who is the woman?  That she is clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars suggests she is the heavenly representative for something--what? Twelve connotes a connection to the twelve tribes of Israel.  Is this woman then the heavenly Israel?  Note, she is pregnant and about to bear a child (4) and that the dragon stands before her ready to devour the child.  The woman gives birth to the child, "a son, a male child, who is to rule all the nations with a rod of iron... is snatched away and taken to God and his throne" (5).  The woman flees into the wilderness and, like the Hebrew in Egypt, is rescued when she is given the two wings of an eagle and the river spewed from the mouth of the dragon is dried up by the earth: Exodus 19.4 "You have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles' wings and brought you to myself." That the child is to rule nations with a rod of iron suggests the Davidic Messiah.  For John, Christianity was born out of the Hebrew tradition and its culmination in Christ, who is to be "snatched up into heaven," or resurrected.  The dragon (17) then goes on to make war on the woman's other children:

Siblings of Jesus are referred to collectively twice in the Gospels. In the account of the "true kindred" (Matthew 12.46–50 par.), Jesus’ mother and brothers come to speak to him while he is teaching. Jesus refuses to see them, however, saying that his true sister, brother, and mother are those who do the will of God.

When Jesus teaches at the synagogue in his hometown of Nazareth, the listeners react angrily to his wisdom and mighty works (Matthew 13.53–58; Mark 6.1–6). The crowd doubts that a local person could be endowed with such power, and they cite the presence of his parents, brothers, and sisters as proof. The brothers are listed by name (James, Joseph [Mark reads Joses], Simon, and Judas) but the sisters only as a group. In Luke 4.22, the crowd asks simply, "Is not this Joseph’s son?"

References to brothers and sisters of Jesus conflict with some understandings of the virgin birth. For those who feel that Jesus’ mother Mary remained a virgin for life, brothers and sisters must be read as cousins or as stepbrothers and stepsisters fathered by Joseph in another, unmentioned, marriage.

Daniel N. Schowalter (Oxford Companion)

Another possible interpretation:

v1 - A great and wondrous sign appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet and a crown of twelve stars on her head - This sign in heaven announces a new section. This should be connected to the opening of God's temple in heaven in the previous verse, Rev 11:19. The 'woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet and a crown of twelve stars on her head' is a clear reference to Joseph's dream (Gen 37:9) and therefore the woman represents the twelve tribes of Israel. Joseph's dream depicts the sun and moon and eleven stars bowing down to him, this is realised when he became the second to Pharaoh and his brothers bowed down to him (Gen 43:26-29). The woman is the elect and in particular here she is the OT elect, who gives birth to the Christ (v5) and later she gives birth to the NT elect (v17). John sees a continuum between the OT and NT elect (see 21:12-14). Wilson says 'In scripture no sharp dividing line is drawn between the true Israel and the new Israel, because the people of the promise are one people, whether they lived before or after the coming of Christ'. But here she represents the OT elect, one of the few references in Revelation to the OT elect alone. Compare the heavenly glory of this woman, who represents the elect (the Bride Eph 5:22), with the earthly glitter of the whore who represents the world, Rev 17:4. This woman stands in contrast to the whore and also to the Queen of heaven. http://www.apocalipsis.org/

 

During 1,260  days while the woman is nourished in the wilderness, war breaks out in heaven (7): "Michael and his angels fought against the dragon."  It's interesting that this angel is Michael, angel of judgment:

 

Michael. One of the archangels, whose name is a rhetorical question meaning "Who is like God?" (or, "Who is like El?"). In apocalyptic literature he is Israel’s patron angel (Daniel 12.1), who fights for Israel against the angels of other nations (Daniel 10.13; Daniel 10.21). As such later tradition identifies him as the nameless divine messenger called "the prince of the army of Yahweh" in Joshua 5.13–15 (cf. Exodus 23.23; note also the spiritual "Michael, Row the Boat Ashore"). Michael also becomes the surrogate of a now transcendent storm god, leading the heavenly armies in the fight against the forces of chaos, and thus is the adversary of Satan (Revelation 12.7; Jude 9). The battle between them becomes a favorite artistic theme and may occur in variant form in the legend of George and the dragon (see Revelation 12.9).

Michael D. Coogan (Oxford Companion)

Having just encountered this same three and a half years, forty-two months, 1,260 days in chapter eleven with respect to God's witnesses, more reason than ever now is accorded to letting the 1,260 days of the woman's being nourished in the wilderness equate to sufficient earthly time. 

After Satan is thrown down to the earth, a loud voice in heaven proclaims,  "Now have come the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God and the authority of his Messiah... the accuser of our comrades has been thrown down...conquered by the blood of the lamb... Rejoice..." (10-12). 

 

 

 

 

 

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Last modified: October 27, 2005