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Lesson 46
“He Will Dwell with Them,
and They Shall Be His People”
Revelation 5-6; 19-22
By Breck England
Behold, the tabernacle
of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and
they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them,
and be their God.
The book of Revelation recounts the
great culmination of the Atonement of Jesus Christ. In its pages,
we see the promise of the Atonement completely fulfilled. Both
sin and death are finally conquered and “cast into the lake of
fire.” Heaven and earth are made new. And in the most intimate
moment of “at-one-ment,” Jesus Christ takes each one of His saints
into His arms and “wipes away all tears from their eyes; and there
shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall
there be any more pain.”
Can
a greater blessing than this be conceived of? Who would exchange
this moment of Atonement — when we are finally “encircled in the
arms of his love” — for any earthly distraction?
The Revelation of the apostle John
is a grand “apocalypse” — a Greek term for “opening of the veil”
— in which the entire plan of salvation is laid out from beginning
to end, culminating in the exaltation of the saints in the celestial
kingdom of God. Many prophets have been privileged to receive
the “apocalyptic vision,” such as the dispensational prophets
Enoch, Abraham, Moses, and Joseph Smith, along with Isaiah, Ezekiel,
Nephi, and others such as John.
In these apocalyptic visions, the
veil is opened and the prophets are allowed to view the pre-mortal
council and war in heaven, the creation, the telestial drama that
constitutes our mortal probation, and the final judgment — in
short, the entire plan of the Lord is laid out in detail. John
was privileged to see it all. As Joseph Smith observed:
John had the curtains of heaven withdrawn, and
by vision looked through the dark vista of future ages, and contemplated
events that should transpire throughout every subsequent period
of time, until the final winding up scene.
The singular mission of recording
for us this great unfolding of the plan of salvation came to John,
the beloved disciple, to give hope to the saints of former days
and to help us prepare for the day when we will come into the
embrace of our Savior. As Nephi envisioned:
I looked and beheld
a man, and he was dressed in a white robe. And the angel said
unto me: Behold one of the twelve apostles of the Lamb ... he
shall write concerning the end of the world ... [and] the things
that were written were plain and pure, and most precious and easy
to the understanding of all men ... the name of the apostle of
the Lamb was John, according to the word of the angel.
Of course, to 21st-century
readers, the book of Revelation is anything but “plain” and “easy
to understand” because many of the archaic literary devices and
images John used, which his contemporaries apparently easily understood,
are strange and unfamiliar to us. For example, a Jew of John’s
time would have recognized the significance of the many references
to temple rites. Still, John’s Revelation remains “most precious”
to us because it is a handbook to our future filled with enlightenment
about our times and directions on how to prepare for the day of
Atonement.
Because John’s literary approach
is not easily decoded, we have to rely on other scriptures, the
explanations of prophets, the insights of scholars, and the Spirit
of the Lord to understand it. It is well worth the effort; in
a sense, it provides the great explanation of everything in the
Bible that precedes it.
The Opening of the Veil of the
Temple
John’s vision of heaven begins with
the opening of the veil:
I looked, and behold,
a door was opened in heaven: and the first voice which I heard
... said, Come up hither, and I will shew thee things which must
be hereafter.
John then enters heaven, which corresponds
to the Holy of Holies in the temple containing the throne of God.
In a circle about the throne/altar, he sees “four and twenty elders
sitting, clothed in white raiment; and they had on their heads
crowns of gold.” These elders represent the royal
priesthood who are “faithful in the work of the ministry” and
who reign in the celestial kingdom of God. (They stand for the 24 courses,
or quorums, of priests in the temple of Jerusalem.)
Here John sees the seven-branched
lamp, or menorah, that burned in the temple before the
veil. In ancient times, this lamp represented the light of heaven;
also, it was like a tree in shape, thus standing for the tree
of life and its luminous fruit.
“Before the throne there was a sea
of glass like unto crystal.” Joseph Smith explained that this
sea of glass is “the earth, in its sanctified, immortal, and eternal
state.” The throne is guarded by four
beasts, which are “figurative expressions” of the “glory of the
classes of beings” in heaven. Their many eyes represent intelligence,
for they are full of light and knowledge; and their wings represent
power.
One beast stands sentinel at each
of the four cardinal points of the compass; we are reminded of the cherubim
that guard the way of the tree of life in Eden. Now we can see that John is
standing inside the heavenly temple, and that the great drama
he is about to see is a temple drama.
The Seven Seals are Broken
A book sealed with seven seals is
brought to the altar. According to Joseph Smith, the book “contains
the revealed will, mysteries, and the works of God; the hidden
things of his economy concerning this earth during the seven thousand
years of its continuance or its temporal existence.” In other
words, the book contains the Lord’s plan in its exquisite detail
— in a sense, the explanation for everything that we undergo in
this world.
The first seal “contains the things
of the first thousand years, and the second also of the second
thousand years,” and so forth. Only Jesus, the
“Lion of Judah,” can unlock this sealed book — in other words,
only in Christ is the meaning of this world accessible to us.
He stands in the midst of the prayer circle, “a Lamb as it had
been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes” that signify His
perfected power and intelligence. (The number seven symbolizes
perfection; the horn is authority, and the eye, as we have seen,
is light and knowledge). As He opens the seals, we will at last
understand the meaning of our lives, of the hardships we undergo,
the adversities we face, the tests by which we are proved.
As the seals are opened, we get a
glimpse of each millennium of the plan’s continuance. Each millennium
has its theme: (1) the white horse, conquest; (2) the red horse,
war; (3) the black horse, famine; (4) the pale horse, disease;
(5) the martyrdom of the saints, possibly signifying the forces
of apostasy that overtook the church of Christ in both the eastern
and western hemispheres; and (6) the turbulent time we live in,
characterized by universal tumult (earth, sun, moon, and stars
all in turmoil). These themes are the difficulties
we all encounter in our telestial sphere — oppression, conflict,
hunger, sickness, persecution, and commotion. These are the conditions
of the test we are taking.
But the Revelation assures us that
every aspect of this ordeal is completely in the Lord’s control.
He and His angels are ever watchful. Like Abraham and other prophets
before him, John used astronomical symbols to signify spiritual
realities. Anciently, the “horsemen” represented important stars
that marked the four cardinal directions on the compass. Additionally,
these stars represented the four archangels that stand guard on
the four sides of the heavenly throne, overseeing the doings of
mankind and acting as God’s agents
| Horseman |
Star |
Direction |
Archangel |
Patriarch |
| White |
Aldebaran |
East |
Michael |
Adam |
| Red |
Regulus |
North |
Raphael |
Enoch? |
| Black |
Fomalhaut |
South |
Gabriel |
Noah |
| Pale |
Antares |
West |
Uriel |
Jacob? |
As
Latter-day Saints, we know that Michael is Adam, the prophet of
the first dispensation; Raphael may well be Enoch, prophet of the second
dispensation; Gabriel is Noah, prophet of the third dispensation. Jewish tradition identifies the angel Uriel with
Jacob, or Israel, patriarch of the Mosaic dispensation.
Thus,
the equation of the four horsemen with the angel-patriarchs supports
the revelation of Joseph Smith in D&C 77:6-7. As God’s agents,
these angels administer His plan — and part of their role is to
administer justice to a corrupt world. In the last days they will
do so, just as they have done before.
From
the safety of the heavenly temple, John witnesses the end of this
worldly system of things. The angel-horsemen go forth to bring
the final pressure on the “kings of the earth, the great men,
the rich men, the mighty men” — “for the great day of his wrath
is come.”
To
this point, the earth is under the sway of a counterfeit god,
Satan. “All authority was given him over every tribe, tongue,
and nation. All who dwell on the earth shall worship him.” And this counterfeit god has many worshipers
— kings and wealthy people, mostly — and his own false “temple,”
which stands in insolent opposition to the heavenly temple of
the true God.
Satan’s Counterfeit Temple Falls
According
to Nephi, “a great and a terrible gulf” divides the true temple
from the counterfeit temple
of Satan. In both John and 1 Nephi, the
counterfeit temple is figured as a “large and spacious building,”
a competing “great city which reigns over the kings of the earth.” Nephi describes it as “filled with people … and
their manner of dress was exceedingly fine; and they were in the
attitude of mocking and pointing their fingers toward those who
had come at and were partaking of the fruit.”
For
John, the vision is identical. The “great city” is “Babylon the Great, the mother of harlots and of the abominations of
the earth.” An alternative symbol for the great and spacious building
is the woman “sitting on a scarlet beast ... arrayed in purple
and scarlet, and adorned with gold and precious stones and pearls,
having in her hand a golden cup full of abominations and the filthiness
of her fornication.”
In
other words, Babylon
has its sacraments too — counterfeits of the Lord’s cup of salvation.
The woman is a symbol; she “is that great city” Babylon,
which according to Nephi stands for the “pride of the world” ...
the “vain imaginations and the pride of the children of men.”
At
length, both John and Nephi see the fall of Babylon.
John declares: “Babylon
the great is fallen, is fallen, and has become a dwelling place
of demons, a prison for every foul spirit.” The saints rejoice at the fall of Babylon;
interestingly, the only people who mourn the fall of Babylon are “the kings of the earth who committed fornication with
her” and “the merchants of the earth [who] have become rich through
the abundance of her luxury.” Who will be sad to see Babylon go? The politicians (kings) and the businessmen
(merchants) — “ the merchants of the earth will weep and mourn
over her, for no one buys their merchandise anymore.”
“And
it fell, and the fall thereof was exceedingly great,” Nephi reports
of the large and spacious building. “And the angel of the Lord
spake unto me again, saying, Thus shall be the destruction of
all nations, kindreds, tongues, and people, that shall fight against
the twelve apostles of the Lamb.”
The
ruler of the fallen city, “that old serpent, which is the devil,
and Satan” is now bound for a thousand years by an angel “having
the key of the bottomless pit, and a great chain in his hand.”
During
this period, a number of souls will reign with Christ upon thrones.
These “have part in the first resurrection;
on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be priests
of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years.” They are “before the throne of
God, and serve him day and night in his temple.” What purpose do these “priests
of God and of Christ” serve during this lengthy period? Clearly,
they are engaged in temple work. President Joseph Fielding Smith
explained:
The great work of the Millennium shall be performed
in temples ... Those who have passed through the resurrection,
and who know all about the people and conditions on the other
side, will place in the hands of those who are in mortality, the
necessary information by and through which the great work of salvation
for every worthy soul shall be performed.
The True Temple of God is Established
After
Satan is loosed and finally vanquished, the true temple of God will be established. The latter
days will see the restoration of the city of Zion
to the earth — a city that is a temple because the Savior
dwells there. John records: “I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem,
coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned
for her husband ... Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men,
and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people.”
The
new city is a perfect temple, with every symbolic
feature restored. Like the Holy of Holies in Solomon’s temple,
the city is a perfect cube: “Its length, breadth, and height are
equal.” The entire city is a Holy of Holies because the
Lord dwells there. In the city the “tree of life” — symbolized
in Solomon’s temple by the branched candlestick — “bare twelve
manner of fruits ... and the leaves of the tree were for the healing
of the nations.” And near the tree flows “a pure river of water
of life, clear as crystal.”
From
Nephi we learn the meaning of the light-filled, fruitful tree:
it is “the love of God, which sheddeth itself abroad in the hearts
of the children of men.” The river, or “fountain of living waters,”
next to the tree is also a representation of the love of God.
Why
two symbols — fruit and water — to stand for the same thing? Because
they represent the flesh and blood of the Savior, who in His love
for us gave Himself for us.
In
these symbols, we should realize that we don’t need to wait until
the Lord comes to have our tears wiped away. Whenever we take
the sacrament, we have the opportunity of accepting His invitation
to have our tears — of guilt, pain, depression, loneliness, discouragement
— wiped away: “I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain
of the water of life freely.”
“He
that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be his God,
and he shall be my son ... And they shall reign forever and ever.
There is no greater promise than to be owned
as a child of God, to be His heir, and to reign with Him forever.
This is the very definition of exaltation, the promise with which
the Bible closes.
As
we end this course of study of the New Testament, I bear you my
testimony that I know Jesus Christ is my Savior. He saves me every
moment of every day, and I am grateful to Him. Everything starts
with Him and ends with Him. He is, as John says, “the Alpha and
the Omega.”
I
pray that one day for us the veil will part; and you and I will
— as John did, as Joseph Smith did, as so many of the prophets
did — see His face.
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© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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About
the Author: |

Breck England,
product architect and consultant for FranklinCovey Company, earned
a bachelor's degree in Medieval History and master's and PhD in
English and literary criticism from the University of Utah. He
was director of consulting for Shipley Associates, an international
business consulting firm, until 2000 when he joined FranklinCovey.
At Brigham Young University, he is adjunct professor of organizational
communication in the Marriott School. He is a member of Phi Beta
Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, the Society for Technical Communication,
and the American Society for Training and Development.
An appointment
in his college years as an assistant researcher to the Church
historian led to the publication of numerous articles. The Life
and Thought of Orson Pratt, a biography of the early LDS apostle,
won the Best First Book award of the Mormon History Association
in 1986.
Brother England
served a mission in Paris, France, and since then as a bishop's
counselor, ward clerk, Institute and Gospel Doctrine teacher,
and member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. He belongs to the Canyon
Park Ward in Bountiful, Utah, where he lives with his wife Valerie
and their five children.
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