We take a break from the Trumpet Judgments 
			now to give the world its final warnings before the Great 
			Tribulation begins. These are the Seven Thunders and the Two 
			Witnesses that God will send to Israel to warn His people to “get 
			right” with Him while there’s still time.  Remember, after the 
			end of the Battle of 
			Ezekiel 38-39, 
			God will have brought every living Jew to Israel, leaving none 
			behind (Ezek. 
			39:28).
			Even though many will 
			have already been martyred during the Seal and Trumpet judgments, 
			especially among those who’ve found the Messiah, there will still be 
			a huge population of religious Jews in Israel with a fully 
			functioning Temple (Daniel 
			9:27).  The Abomination of Desolation will put 
			an end to the sacrifice and offerings, but that won’t happen until 
			the middle of the last 7 years, described in 
			Rev. 13.
			Revelation 10
			The Angel and the Little Scroll
			
			Then I saw another mighty 
			angel coming down from heaven. He was robed in a cloud, with a 
			rainbow above his head; his face was like the sun, and his legs were 
			like fiery pillars. He was holding a little scroll, which lay open 
			in his hand. He planted his right foot on the sea and his left foot 
			on the land, and he gave a loud shout like the roar of a lion. When 
			he shouted, the voices of the seven thunders spoke. And when the 
			seven thunders spoke, I was about to write; but I heard a voice from 
			heaven say, “Seal up what the seven thunders have said and do not 
			write it down.” (Rev 
			10:1-4)
			Lots of things in this passage hint at the 
			possible identity of this angel. He’s clothed in a cloud and his 
			legs are like pillars of fire, which reminds us of the Angel of the 
			Lord who protected the Israelites in the wilderness. The Rainbow 
			over his head is symbolic of God’s mercy. His voice is like the roar 
			of a lion.   Could this be the Lord?  The angel’s 
			identity is not disclosed but the passage is certainly rich in 
			symbolism.
			The Seven Thunders most probably contain an 
			undisclosed warning spoken by God between the 6th and 7th Trumpets. 
			John was about to detail this for us when the Lord told him not to.
			As a point of interest, in 
			Psalm 29 
			the voice of the Lord is compared to the sound of thunder.  His 
			name is spoken four times in the two-verse introduction of the Psalm 
			and four times more in the two-verse conclusion (four is the number 
			of Creation). It appears ten times in verses 3 through 9 (ten is a 
			number that denotes the completeness of Divine Order) and the phrase 
			“Voice of the Lord” is repeated seven times (seven is the number of 
			perfection). 
			Psalm 29 is often called “the Seven Thunders of God” 
			as well.
			With the coming Seventh Trumpet, we’ll be 
			told that the Kingdoms of the world have become the Kingdom of our 
			Lord (Rev. 11:15) 
			and for the first time the traditional translation of God’s name as 
			“the One Who is and Who was and Who is to come” is changed to just 
			“the One Who is and Who was” (Rev. 
			11:17) The omission of the phrase “Who is to come” 
			indicates that His reign has begun. (Some translations put the “Who 
			is to come” part back in but the Greek text doesn’t include it.)
			This means that in the Heavenly view, the 
			Great Tribulation will have begun. After Satan’s losing battle in 
			Heaven and confinement to Earth in 
			Rev. 12, 
			the anti-Christ will make his official appearance on Earth as 
			Satan’s host at the beginning of 
			Rev. 13. 
			(He will have first come on the scene in 
			Rev. 6 as 
			a mere man.) This will signal the start of the Great Tribulation on 
			Earth. The seven Bowl judgments will begin soon thereafter.
			Put all this together and you can make a 
			circumstantial case that the Seven Thunders will announce that the 
			Great Tribulation with its Bowl Judgments will complete the Divine 
			Order, perfectly satisfying God’s righteous requirement that the 
			people of Earth be judged for their sins, and leaving Earth in a 
			condition of readiness to receive her King.
			
			Then the angel I had seen 
			standing on the sea and on the land raised his right hand to heaven. 
			And he swore by him who lives for ever and ever, who created the 
			heavens and all that is in them, the earth and all that is in it, 
			and the sea and all that is in it, and said, “There will be no more 
			delay! But in the days when the seventh angel is about to sound his 
			trumpet, the mystery of God will be accomplished, just as he 
			announced to his servants the prophets.”
			
			Then the voice that I had 
			heard from heaven spoke to me once more: “Go, take the scroll that 
			lies open in the hand of the angel who is standing on the sea and on 
			the land.”
			
			So I went to the angel 
			and asked him to give me the little scroll. He said to me, “Take it 
			and eat it. It will turn your stomach sour, but in your mouth it 
			will be as sweet as honey.” I took the little scroll from the 
			angel’s hand and ate it. It tasted as sweet as honey in my mouth, 
			but when I had eaten it, my stomach turned sour. Then I was told, 
			“You must prophesy again about many peoples, nations, languages and 
			kings.” (Rev. 
			10:5-11)
			The Lord told John to take the scroll and eat 
			it. At first taste, it seemed sweet as honey, but after he swallowed 
			it, his stomach turned sour. This is to signify that as followers of 
			the Lord, we anticipate the fulfillment of End Times prophecy with 
			much excitement and joy.  We know His judgment is righteous, 
			and that He’s been long-suffering, and patient almost to a fault.  
			But because our enemy is so intent upon succeeding in his rebellion 
			against God, the horror and carnage of the warfare necessary to 
			accomplish his defeat is enough to make you sick.
			Revelation 11:1-14
			The Two Witnesses
			
			I was given a reed like a 
			measuring rod and was told, “Go and measure the temple of God and 
			the altar, and count the worshipers there. (Rev. 
			11:1)
			Here’s evidence along with 
			Daniel 9:27 
			and 2 Thes. 2:4 
			that a Temple will exist before the beginning of the Great 
			Tribulation. Having seen the miraculous way in which God delivered 
			them from certain defeat in the battle of 
			Ezekiel 38-39, 
			Jews from all over the world will respond to His offer of 
			reconciliation and make aliyah (return to Israel).  Once their 
			Old Covenant relationship is restored, they’ll need a Temple for 
			worship, and early in the 70th Week of Daniel it will be built. 
			Nearly 2000 years of diaspora (scattering) will finally end.
			
			But exclude the outer 
			court; do not measure it, because it has been given to the Gentiles. 
			They will trample on the holy city for 42 months. (Rev. 
			11:2)
			This verse has been used to support the idea 
			that the Temple will be built next door to the Dome of the Rock. 
			Later, I’ll offer an alternative to this view. But first let’s meet 
			the Two Witnesses.
			
			And I will give power to 
			my two witnesses, and they will prophesy for 1,260 days, clothed in 
			sackcloth.” These are the two olive trees and the two lampstands 
			that stand before the Lord of the earth. If anyone tries to harm 
			them, fire comes from their mouths and devours their enemies. This 
			is how anyone who wants to harm them must die. These men have power 
			to shut up the sky so that it will not rain during the time they are 
			prophesying; and they have power to turn the waters into blood and 
			to strike the earth with every kind of plague as often as they want. 
			(Rev. 11:3-6)
			The 3½ year ministry of the two witnesses is 
			not congruent with either half of Daniel’s 70th week but overlaps 
			them, beginning late in the first half of the 70th week and ending 
			sometime before the 2nd Coming. Before discussing the identity of 
			the two witneses we should note that they provide the ultimate 
			fulfillment of 
			Zechariah 4:11-14, the “Sons of Oil” prophecy 
			partially fulfilled by Zerubbabel and Joshua in the time of the 2nd 
			Temple’s construction.
			Who Are Those Guys?
			There are three primary candidates for their 
			identity; Moses, Elijah and Enoch. Elijah and Enoch are popular 
			choices because they’re the only two in the Old Testament who didn’t 
			die, but were taken into heaven alive. And Moses and Elijah are 
			liked because the powers of the two witnesses are identical to those 
			exercised by Moses in the Plagues of Egypt and Elijah in his 
			contention against idolatry in Israel. Remember, it climaxed in his 
			spectacular defeat of the prophets of Baal on Mt. Carmel with fire 
			from heaven and the end of the  3½-year drought he had earlier 
			proclaimed (1 
			Kings 17:1, 1 Kings 18:16-46).  (You have to 
			read James 5:17 
			for the duration of the drought.)
			Also Moses and Elijah were on the Mt. Of 
			Transfiguration with Jesus and the disciples (Matt.17:1-13) 
			and according to early church tradition were the two men in white 
			who appeared to the disciples following the Lord’s ascension (Acts 
			1:10-11).  And finally, Moses and Elijah are 
			two of the most highly revered figures in all of Israel’s past, more 
			able than anyone else God could send to convey His message.  
			Moses was the Law Giver and Elijah was the greatest of Israel’s 
			Prophets. Their two names are all but synonymous with the Jewish 
			name for their scriptures, the Law and the Prophets.
			I believe Enoch’s disappearance before the 
			Great Flood was a special event designed to pre-figure the 
			disappearance of the Church before the Great Tribulation. 
			As it was in the days of 
			Noah, so will it be at the Coming of the Son of Man. (Matt 
			24:37) In the days of Noah the world perished in the 
			Flood. They represent those who will perish in the End times 
			judgments. Noah and his family were preserved through the Flood and 
			represent Israel, preserved through the judgments.  Enoch was 
			taken alive into Heaven before the Flood, representing the Church 
			who will be taken alive into heaven before the judgments begin.  
			For all these reasons, I hold the Moses and Elijah view.
			
			Now when they have 
			finished their testimony, the beast that comes up from the Abyss 
			will attack them, and overpower and kill them. Their bodies will lie 
			in the street of the great city, which is figuratively called Sodom 
			and Egypt, where also their Lord was crucified. For three and a half 
			days men from every people, tribe, language and nation will gaze on 
			their bodies and refuse them burial. The inhabitants of the earth 
			will gloat over them and will celebrate by sending each other gifts, 
			because these two prophets had tormented those who live on the 
			earth.
			
			But after the three and a 
			half days a breath of life from God entered them, and they stood on 
			their feet, and terror struck those who saw them. Then they heard a 
			loud voice from heaven saying to them, “Come up here.” And they went 
			up to heaven in a cloud, while their enemies looked on.
			
			At that very hour there 
			was a severe earthquake and a tenth of the city collapsed. Seven 
			thousand people were killed in the earthquake, and the survivors 
			were terrified and gave glory to the God of heaven.
			
			The second woe has 
			passed; the third woe is coming soon. (Rev. 
			11:7-14)
			There’s no question that their bodies will be 
			left where they fall in the streets of Jerusalem, because that’s the 
			city where the Lord was crucified.  And through the technology 
			of satellite communications their dead bodies will be visible all 
			over the world.
			In Middle Eastern cultures the greatest 
			insult one can convey is to deny burial to one’s enemy. Their deaths 
			prompt the only expression of joy on earth in the entire book. But 
			after 3½ days, symbolic of the length of the Great Tribulation, the 
			two witnesses will hear the same command that John heard in 
			Rev. 4:1, 
			“Come up here!” and will ascend into Heaven in full view of the 
			whole world. Just as the Lord’s command in chapter 4 was a model of 
			the Rapture of the Church, the command here is a model of the 
			resurrection of the Tribulation martyrs.
			In the Psalms we read, 
			O God, the nations have 
			invaded your inheritance; they have defiled your holy temple, they 
			have reduced Jerusalem to rubble. They have given the dead bodies of 
			your servants as food to the birds of the air, the flesh of your 
			saints to the beasts of the earth. They have poured out blood like 
			water all around Jerusalem, and there is no one to bury the dead.(Psalm 
			79:1-3) It’s a clear prophecy of things to come, and 
			it begins in 
			Revelation 11.
			By saying that the earthquake survivors gave 
			glory to God, John didn’t mean that they worshiped Him or came to 
			faith in Him. It means that they correctly attributed these 
			miraculous events to Him, like the Egyptian priests did in 
			explaining the cause of the plagues in 
			Exodus 8:19.
			Where’s The Temple?
			This part of chapter 11 hints at some 
			troubling inconsistencies with our understanding of the coming 
			Temple’s location. It’s given as the Holy City in verse 2, but in 
			verse 8 Jerusalem is called the Great City, figuratively Sodom and 
			Egypt. Are they the same? The Holy City will be trampled on by the 
			Gentiles for 42 months, but Jesus said that Jerusalem would be 
			trampled on by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles were 
			fulfilled, over 2000 years.
			For generations a controversy has existed 
			among Jews and Christians alike as to the exact location of 
			Solomon’s and Herod’s Temples. The Jewish Sanhedrin, formed again a 
			few years ago after 1600 years, is tackling the question as one of 
			it’s first priorities. It’s a good start, but I don’t think they’re 
			asking the right question. Sure it’s great to know the exact 
			placement of these historical monuments to God, but the real 
			question is, “Where will the next Temple be?”
			Many Christians think the coming 3rd Temple 
			will be desecrated by the Abomination of Desolation during the Great 
			Tribulation and then destroyed. For that reason they call it the 
			Tribulation Temple. Then another Temple, number four, will be built 
			at the beginning of the Millennium.  But the only model we have 
			for what will happen is something that already has happened,  
			the desecration of the 2nd Temple leading up to the Macabbean 
			Revolt. And it’s something that Jesus took pains to point us toward 
			in the Olivet Discourse (Matt. 
			24:15).
			In the model, Syrian ruler Antiochus 
			Epiphanes stormed the Temple and converted it into a pagan worship 
			center in 167 BC. He slaughtered a pig on the altar and erected a 
			statue of Zeus (Jupiter) in the holy place with his own face on it, 
			proclaiming himself to be God (Epiphanes means god made manifest).  
			Then he forced the Jews to worship him on pain of death.  In 1 
			Macabbees, this act was called the Abomination of Desolation, the 
			only event so named in history. It triggered the Macabbean revolt, a 
			3 ½ year battle to oust Antiochus from the Promised Land.  
			Almost 200 years later Jesus told Israel to look for the same thing 
			to happen again in the future as the sign that the Great Tribulation 
			has begun (Matt. 
			24:21), thereby identifying the statue of Antiochus 
			as a model of the End Times Abomination of Desolation.   
			The Macabbean Revolt contains many remarkable similarities to the 
			Great Tribulation.
			Here’s the point. The Jews didn’t demolish 
			the Temple after the Abomination of Desolation in 167 BC. When they 
			recaptured it, they destroyed the statue and replaced the Altar. 
			Then they subjected the Temple to the eight-day purification 
			ceremony required by Law and began using it again. The purification 
			is remembered to this day in the Feast of Hanukkah. If the model is 
			complete, then the Temple built during Daniel’s 70th week won’t be 
			destroyed either, but will become the Millennial Temple described in 
			great detail in 
			Ezekiel 40-44. (The Jews call Ezekiel’s Temple the 
			3rd Temple, which would make it the next one.) And that means it 
			won’t be built in Jerusalem. Next time I’ll show you where it will 
			be.