02-05-2026 PART 1: God’s Sovereignty Even Over the Darkness
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概要
Section 1
This teaching begins by addressing a critical issue in how believers approach the book of Revelation: immaturity in treating differing eschatological views as moral failures. Scripture does not demand uniformity of end-times interpretation, but maturity, humility, and readiness before the Lord. Premillennialism, amillennialism, and postmillennialism each contain valuable insights that prepare believers in different ways—expectation, perseverance, and kingdom-building. The unifying purpose of eschatology is not argument, but readiness. Whether Christ returns immediately, calls His people to endure hardship, or delays to allow further kingdom expansion, the call remains the same: be faithful, alert, and anchored in the Lord. Revelation is not given to divide the Church, but to awaken it.
Section 2
As Revelation 9 opens with the fifth trumpet, attention is drawn to the fallen star given the key to the bottomless pit. The identity of this figure has been debated, ranging from Christ, to an angelic being, to Satan himself. What matters most is not the identity, but the authority structure. The key is not taken; it is given. This emphasizes one of the most important themes in Revelation: God is always in control. Satan has no independent authority, no autonomous power, and no freedom to act apart from divine permission. Even darkness operates on a leash. The smoke rising from the abyss symbolizes deception, confusion, and spiritual blindness, echoing patterns seen throughout Scripture, including the plagues of Egypt. Yet even here, the message is clear—this darkness is limited, counterfeit, and temporary, and it exists only because God allows it for His purposes.
Section 3
The emergence of the locusts intensifies the warning, portraying torment directed exclusively at those without the seal of God. Whether interpreted symbolically as demonic forces or literally through other frameworks, the target is unmistakable: those who have rejected Christ. Believers, sealed by the Holy Spirit as taught in Ephesians, are protected. The imagery of scorpions highlights pain, fear, and torment without death, resembling a foretaste of judgment rather than its completion. This passage is not meant to terrify believers, but to sober them and reassure them. God protects His people, governs even the worst evil, and never relinquishes authority. Revelation 9 ultimately reinforces comfort, not fear, reminding believers that no matter how dark the imagery becomes, heaven still holds the chain, God remains sovereign, and His children are never abandoned.