|
Who is the woman in chapter 12?
The woman in chapter 12 refers to God's Church
in the midst of the Great Tribulation. Through the woman persecuted by
the Dragon, chapter 12 shows us that God's Church would be greatly harmed
by Satan when the end times come. However, through the special protection
of God, His Church will overcome Satan and the Antichrist with its faith,
and receive the glory of being clothed in His great blessings.
Because the saints who remain in God's Church would receive the nourishment
of faith even in times of the Tribulation, they will overcome the Antichrist
and triumph by embracing their martyrdom with their faith in the gospel
of the water and the Spirit. God explains this fact to us through the
metaphor of the woman in chapter 12.
Revelation 12:13-17 tells us, "Now when the dragon saw that he had
been cast to the earth, he persecuted the woman who gave birth to the
male Child. But the woman was given two wings of a great eagle, that she
might fly into the wilderness to her place, where she is nourished for
a time and times and half a time, from the presence of the serpent. So
the serpent spewed water out of his mouth like a flood after the woman,
that he might cause her to be carried away by the flood. But the earth
helped the woman, and the earth opened its mouth and swallowed up the
flood which the dragon had spewed out of his mouth. And the dragon was
enraged with the woman, and he went to make war with the rest of her offspring,
who keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ."
Satan, who is often described as the Dragon in the Bible, was originally
an angel that was driven out of Heaven for seeking to take over God's
place. Because the Devil, together with other angels that followed him,
was cast out of Heaven as a result, and knowing that he would soon be
bound in the bottomless pit, he then came down to this earth and persecuted
God's Church and His saints.
Although Satan tried to prevent Jesus Christ from doing what He came to
this earth to do-that is, saving the mankind from sin-Christ nevertheless
took upon the sins of the mankind Himself with His baptism, bled His blood
on the Cross, rose from the dead again, and thereby has indeed saved the
mankind from all its sins. Jesus therefore completed the Father's will.
In spite of Satan's attempts to interfere with the work of Jesus to carry
out God's will to save the mankind from sin, Christ overcame the Devil's
disturbance and fulfilled all of the Father's will.
However, by deceiving many people and turning them into his allies, Satan
has made them stand against Jesus Christ and the saints. Knowing that
his days are numbered, he incites the people of this earth to stand against
God and persecutes His saints. By making sure that the world is overrun
by sin, Satan has made everyone pursue after sin and hardened their hearts
to stand against God with their iniquities.
Satan attacks the beloved saints of God endlessly with sin, for he knows
very well that he is running out of time. He has made everyone of this
world pursue after sin and hardened their hearts to stand against God
and His saints with their sins. As such, when the end times come, the
saints must defend their faith and fight against and overcome Satan.
But God has a special blessing in store for His saints, for He loves the
saints who remain inside His Church. This blessing is that He would nurture
the saints with the nourishment of faith in God's Church during the first
three and a half years of the Tribulation, before the Antichrist makes
his appearance in this world, deceives people and makes them into his
servants to stand against and persecute God and His saints. Why? Because
when the time of rampant sin comes and the Antichrist makes his appearance,
the saints must be martyred. To do so, God would nurture His saints through
His Church and enable them to be martyred with their faith for three and
a half years-that is, "for a time and times and half a time" (Revelation
12:14).
|