The Scroll and the Lamb
					
					Then I saw in the 
					right hand of him who sat on the throne a scroll with 
					writing on both sides and sealed with seven seals. And I saw 
					a mighty angel proclaiming in a loud voice, “Who is worthy 
					to break the seals and open the scroll?” But no one in 
					heaven or on earth or under the earth could open the scroll 
					or even look inside it. I wept and wept because no one was 
					found who was worthy to open the scroll or look inside. 
					(Rev 
					5:1-4)
					This scroll 
					has been called the title deed to planet Earth. Scrolls 
					normally had writing on one side only, but in a few cases 
					the Lord writes on both sides. When He does it indicates 
					that there’s a judgment coming.
					In 
					Ezekiel 2 
					a scroll with writing on both sides meant that Israel was 
					about to be judged, and Ezekiel was being chosen to bring 
					the news to the other captives in Babylon that soon the 
					whole nation would be joining them for a 70 year stay. In
					Zechariah 
					5, a flying scroll the same size as the 
					tabernacle’s Holy Place warned that those who failed to keep 
					the Law would be banished from God’s presence and their 
					homes destroyed. Although this scroll mentioned only the 
					commandment against theft on one side and only the one 
					against false witness on the other, the fact that one was in 
					the middle of the first stone tablet and the other was in 
					the middle of the second one leads scholars to believe that 
					they represent all 10 Commandments.
					The reason John wept so bitterly is 
					because he knew what was at stake here. Only someone who 
					could redeem Planet Earth and return it to its rightful 
					owner would be able to open the scroll, and no one could be 
					found. Not in Heaven, not on Earth, not under the Earth. 
					Without a qualified redeemer Earth would be lost for all 
					eternity.
					
					Then one of the 
					elders said to me, “Do not weep! See, the Lion of the tribe 
					of Judah, the Root of David, has triumphed. He is able to 
					open the scroll and its seven seals.” Then I saw a Lamb, 
					looking as if it had been slain, standing in the center of 
					the throne, encircled by the four living creatures and the 
					elders. He had seven horns and seven eyes, which are the 
					seven spirits of God sent out into all the earth. 
					(Rev. 
					5:5-6)
					There is someone worthy to open the 
					scroll, after all! The fact that the word Lamb is 
					capitalized here means that this is The Lamb of God from
					John 1:29 
					who takes away the sin of the world.  He’s also the 
					Lion of Judah from 
					Genesis 49:9-10 
					and the Root of David from 
					Isaiah 11:1-3.
					John described Him as a Lamb looking 
					as if it had been slain, so we know He’s still in human 
					form, and still bears the scars of His crucifixion. Once 
					Jesus agreed to become a man, He became a man forever.  
					This Lamb is the giver of the Holy Spirit, confirming that 
					it’s the Lord who has triumphed. He is able to open the 
					scroll and its seven seals because He redeemed the planet at 
					the same time He was saving us. (Romans 
					8:19-21)
					I Didn’t Know It Was Lost
					How was the Earth lost in the first 
					place? Some believe that in Eternity past, the one we call 
					Satan was given the Earth as his kingdom. It was a gift in 
					keeping with his stature as both the anointed cherub, in 
					charge of the ones who guard the very Throne of God, and 
					Worship Leader in the heavenly realms as well. He truly was 
					the light bearer then (Lucifer means light bearer in Latin) 
					adorned with every precious stone with a voice like a pipe 
					organ. He was the model of perfection, full of wisdom and 
					perfect in beauty, the ultimate created being (Ezekiel 
					28:11-14).
					But puffed up in the arrogance of 
					self love and pride, he rebelled and was driven out in 
					disgrace, his positions and his possessions taken from him, 
					his kingdom laid waste (Ezek. 
					28:15-17).  He sat there amidst the 
					ruin for who knows how long, powerless to do anything, until 
					God said, “Let there be light,” and all the angels shouted 
					for joy. (Job 
					38:7)
					When God created Adam five days later 
					and gave him dominion over the Earth, Satan conspired to get 
					it back. Indwelling a serpent, he tricked Adam and Eve out 
					of their land, gaining back through deception that which he 
					had lost through rebellion. In the process he had also 
					divested Adam and Eve of their immortality, causing their 
					deaths and the deaths of all their children (Genesis 
					2:16-17). He immediately set about to 
					rebuild his kingdom, becoming the prince of this world (John 
					12:31) and the god of this age (2 
					Cor. 4:4).
					God’s law requires that a next of kin 
					redeem that which a family member has lost (Leviticus 
					25:25).   According to the law a 
					son could redeem what his father had lost, but in the 
					transaction Adam had become a sinner, disqualifying all of 
					his sons from ever redeeming him. The coin of redemption was 
					the blood of a sinless man, and all of Adam’s sons were 
					sinners, having been born in their father’s likeness. (Gen. 
					5:3) Adam was a son of God (Luke 
					3:38) so only another son of God would 
					suffice.
					Since the sins of the fathers are 
					visited upon the sons (Exod. 
					20:5) a woman could give birth to a sinless 
					man, but only if she could do so without the aid of a 
					husband. Thus, in the garden God announced that the seed of 
					the woman would redeem what Satan had stolen, (Gen 
					3:15) a prophecy of the virgin birth.
					In due time, the Son of God, born of 
					a virgin, gave His life to pay mankind’s debt of sin and 
					redeem Adam’s stolen property, Planet Earth. All God 
					(sinless) and all human (man), He is the only One in 
					creation worthy to take the scroll and open its seals.
					As Adam’s Kinsman Redeemer, He paid 
					the debt of sin owed by Adam’s progeny and redeemed the 
					property that Adam lost as well. Now He’s come to take 
					possession of that which He’s paid for. Since the next of 
					kin was also responsible for avenging the death of a family 
					member, He also comes as Adam’s Avenger of Blood (Numbers 
					35:16-21), and that’s one of the reasons why 
					the rest of this book is the story of great judgments.
					
					He came and took 
					the scroll from the right hand of him who sat on the throne. 
					And then he had taken it, the four living creatures and the 
					twenty-four elders fell down before the Lamb. Each one had a 
					harp and they were holding golden bowls full of incense, 
					which are the prayers of the saints. And they sang a new 
					song:
					
					“You are worthy 
					to take the scroll and to open its seals, because you were 
					slain, and with your blood you purchased men 
					(us) for God 
					from every tribe and language and people and nation. You 
					have made them (us) 
					to be a kingdom (kings) 
					and priests to serve our God, and they (we) 
					will reign on the earth.” (Rev. 
					5:7-10)
					I’ve placed the more accurate 
					translations of this passage in parentheses. The Greek word 
					used here is a first person pronoun, the plural of me. It 
					appears 173 times in the Bible as us and we, never as third 
					person words like men or them or they. Also the Greek 
					language uses the same word for king and kingdom, so you 
					have to decide which one to use from the context. Kings fits 
					better than kingdom. All my substitutions are consistent 
					with the KJV translation.
					Some of the modern translations take 
					either the post trib or a-milliennial view or both and are 
					therefore reluctant to show the raptured church in Heaven in
					
					Revelation 5. Instead, by changing the 
					passage to the third person, they have the 24 elders sing 
					about the church as if we’re still on earth. But it doesn’t 
					work. The 24 elders are the church. This is a song for the 
					redeemed and only the church can sing it. The King James 
					version is correct.
					
					Then I looked and 
					heard the voice of many angels, numbering thousands upon 
					thousands, and ten thousand times ten thousand. They 
					encircled the throne and the living creatures and the 
					elders. In a loud voice they sang:
					
					“Worthy is the 
					Lamb, who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom 
					and strength and honor and glory and praise!”
					
					Then I heard 
					every creature in heaven and on earth and under the earth 
					and on the sea, and all that is in them, singing:
					
					“To him who sits 
					on the throne and to the Lamb be praise and honor and glory 
					and power, for ever and ever!”
					
					The four living 
					creatures said, “Amen,” and the elders fell down and 
					worshiped. (Rev. 
					5:11-14)
					The powerful work done by George 
					Frederic Handel in setting these words to music in his 
					“Messiah” will pale into insignificance when compared to 
					this angelic choir. No one knows just how big this choir is. 
					Ten thousand was the largest number in use in those days. 
					Writing today John might have used “millions and millions” 
					just as easily.
					C.H. Spurgeon wrote that the Greek 
					word translated all (or every) had seven or eight different 
					uses, and only on rare cases did any of them literally mean 
					each and every one. More likely John meant that every 
					classification of mankind was represented, the rich, the 
					poor, the free, the enslaved, the Jew, the Gentile, etc. 
					These were joined by the animals on land, the birds in the 
					air, the fish of the sea, and even those in the underworld, 
					who though they rebelled and await their judgment in chains, 
					recognize the authority of The Christ. (James 
					2:19)
					Like the four living creatures, I can 
					only add, “Amen!”