The ‘Beast’ in the Book of Revelation, He’s Here

I have been reading Richard Bauckham’s The Climax of Prophecy: Studies on the Book of Revelation; I was spurned to read this because I read his smaller book The Theology of the Book of Revelation a few months ago, which was excellent and a must read. In fact I would say that if you haven’t read either of these books you haven’t really ever studied the book of Revelation. What I want to highlight is a bit of Bauckham’s discussion and identification of the Beast in the book of Revelation. Now, if your reading this as a dispensationalist you will be challenged (to say the least); but I think if you read Bauckham’s development in full you would be hard pressed to refute what he has to say. He looks at the internal structure of the book, and really presses the ‘Epistle’ genre of the book (then also the ‘Apocalyptic’ and ‘Prophetic’); resulting in taking seriously that John was writing for the seven churches he is speaking to in 1st century Graeco-Rome. Bauckham is at his best as he situates the apocalyptic genre of Revelation in its proper literary context. Meaning that he identifies how all of the picteresque and emotive language of Revelation was understood within its historical context, and what the prophetic significance would have been for these 1st century Christians; and then what it means for us today (by way of application). I uphold what Bauckham here communicates about the ‘Beast’, and I want to commend it to you for your consideration. What he brings out on the Beast and Empire presents a paradigm shifting proposition in the way that most Evangelical Christians have understood this amazing book. I am going to share this quote on the Beast and Empire from Bauckham, and then I will close with a few parting comments.

[T]he images of the beast will probably become most easily accessible to us as we realise that it was primarily in developing the theme of christological parody that John found the Nero legend useful. It enabled him to construct a history of the beast as paralleling the death, the resurrection and the parousia of Jesus Christ. Some interpretation of Revelation has made the theme of christological parody seem a mere creative fantasy which John projects onto the Roman Empire, which of course had no intention of aping the Christian story of Jesus. In fact, as we have seen, the christological parody corresponds to real features of history of the empire, to the character of the imperial cult, and to contemporary expectations of the future of the empire. It is a profound prophetic interpretation of the contemporary religio-political image of the empire, both in Rome’s own propaganda and in its subjects’ profoundest responses to Roman rule. This religio-political ideology, which John sees as a parody of the Christian claims about Christ, was no mere cover for the hard political realities: it entered deeply into the contemporary dynamics of power as they affected the lives of John’s contemporaries. He sees it as a deification of power. The empire’s success is founded on military might and people’s adulation of military might. By these standards Christ and the martyrs are the unsuccessful victims of the empire. Instead of worshipping the risen Christ who has won his victory by suffering witness to the truth, the world worships the beast whose ‘resurrection’ is the proof that this military might is invincible. The parallel between the ‘death’ and ‘resurrection’ of the beast and the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ poses the issue of what is truly divine. Is it the beast’s apparent success which is worthy of religious trust and worship? Or is the apparent failure of Christ and the martyrs the true witness to the God who can be ultimately trusted and may alone be worshipped?

The ambiguity of the period of the beast’s reign, in which to earthly appearances the beast’s ‘resurrection’ has established his eternal kingdom, while those who acknowledge God’s rule are slaughtered by the beast, cannot be permanent. God’s kingdom must come. The parallel between the beast’s ‘parousia’ and Christ’s poses the issue of what will turn out ultimately to be divine, whose kingdom will prevail in the end. The cult of military power contains its own contradiction: the city which lived by military conquest will fall by military conquest. But beyond that, military power which aims only at its own absolute supremacy must prove a false messiah. It overreaches itself because it is the merely human grasping for what is truly only divine. It is only the parousia of Christ that can establish an eternal kingdom, because it is truly the coming of the eternal God who alone canΒ be trusted with absolute supremacy.

The riddle of the number of the beast pointed specifically to Nero as the figure whose history and legend displayed, to those who had wisdom, the nature of the Roman Empire’s attempt to rival God. Any contemporary reappropriation of Revelation’s images that aims to expose the dynamics of power in the contemporary world in the light of the Gospel would also have to be specific. [Richard Bauckham, The Climax of Prophecy, 451-52]

Theological Implications

The first thing I want to draw our attention to is Bauckham’s last paragraph. What he is doing with this is delimiting the application of the book of Revelation to a particular set of boundaries. In other words, he is using its original audience and shape as determinative for how we can appropriate and apply it to our own context and situation today (just as in principle we should interpret the so called Minor Prophets or Book of the Twelve). What this does, by implication, is that it disallows the Dispensationalist interpretation of the book of Revelation. It won’t allow for providing the kind of the nitty-gritty detail that Dispensational exegesis of this book is known for. There is a general understanding of end time events revealed in this book (as it pertains to the end of the current world system), and only a more particular understanding of the consummate age or heaven. In other words, to read stuff into Revelation (like identifying the European union as the ten headed beast, or taking the “Mark of the Beast” as a literal mark or bar code embedded on your hand or forehead) will not work; and this is convincingly revealed as the exegete studies the background context and Jewish-Christian apocalyptic tradition from which John wrote and received the revelation of Jesus.

Bauckham’s prior development, to the quote above, has highlighted how the history in the 1st century (second Temple Judaism) supplies all the historical referents for which John’s apocalyptic language finds a referent. In other words, the language of “Beast” was common moniker for the Roman Empire, and its gone wild military power. The ‘Mark of the Beast’ was required in order to buy and sell in the Roman Empire (or allegiance to Nero and the Caesars). So as Bauckham notes, if true, then the application of this (prophetically for the future) is that the power of the Beast (represented by empires who have their strength through military might and power) will not last (which was immediately realized in the Roman context as ultimately the Roman empire collapsed, but this kind of “power” has continued to persist into the present). Also there is an interesting note, historically in regards to the language of the Beast receiving a fatal blow to the head, and then his resurrection (which was also common apocalyptic language directed toward the Roman empire and the Nero legend by other apocalyptic writings during this period like the Ascension of Isaiah etc.); Bauckham identifies how this was something that had already happened in reference to the Beast (in particular Nero legend, whom the number 666 through Gematria [the common usage of Greek letters that have numeric value to identify people or places, in this instance, the Greek letters for Nero add up to 666]); that after Nero committed suicide, it appeared that the Roman empire was doomed, but at the time of 70 AD Titus Vespasian resurrected and coalesced the empire through the sacking of Jerusalem and the military might of the Rome. It appeared that the Beast had died, but within a short period of time he rose again to excessive power. These are just a few examples of how Bauckham reorientates the book of Revelation through providing a thick account of the context in which the book of Revelation was written. The exegete, if genuine, cannot simply over-look what Bauckham has provided if he or she is going to honestly engage the book of Revelation. Which leads to my last implication.

For all too long, personally, folks I have been around who want to continue holding onto their particular interpretive schema of things (especially dispensationalists) will caricature other interpretive approaches to the book of Revelation in particular. There usually is a sketch of the other positions (like historist, idealist, preterist), but then this is only used to relativize the interpretive situation (or confuse); at which point the dispensationalist steps in and offers his clarity of interpreting the book of Revelation through a futurist lens alone. This is not good practice, and it ultimately turns people like me off. True, each one of us has to make our own decisions when it comes to principles of interpretation; but I would like to think that that involves being honest, and taking all the evidence (we are aware of) into account. That we are not so locked into particular denominations and their distinctives that we are afraid to change our minds, and allow our preunderstandings that we bring to the text to change in accordance with the relative weight of the evidence on the ground that we are confronted with through the kind of rigorous study that Paul admonishes us to (cf. II Tim. 2.15). [I am of course not talking about essential things here, I am talking about so called secondary things like this issue entails]

One more implication. If what Bauckham writes is true, then this has paradigmatic consequences for how we view our current situation, especially as Westerners and Americans in particular. We should not conflate being a Christian with being a Patriot, a Republican-Democrat-Independent, or simply with being an American. In fact insofar as America’s strength is rooted in her military might, then she exemplifies the features of the ‘Beast’ and not the City on the Hill that Ronald Reagan attributed to her. What the book of Revelation does is that it places any empire (like, really the emerging Global Empire we inhabit) on notice; that its time is short, and that all of its wanton desires are coming to an end. You can kill the Christians (and the ‘Beast’ has, statistically more so in the 20th century by itself than the previous 19 added together), but it is through the martyrs blood that the Beast only proves his own demise; the blood of the martyrs cries out, and signals that the Lion-Lamb’s kingdom has come and will finally come at the last trumpet. What Bauckham’s insights implies is that the Beast (or Anti-Christ) is not necessarily embodied in a single person; instead Nero and the Roman empire exemplifies or symbolizes the kind of power that is embodied by empires or empire in the world. There will be, according to the unfolding of the judgments in Revelation (the Seal, Trumpet, Bowl) an intensification of the Beast and empire just prior to the return of Christ (where the Danielic ‘Stone’ will crush the kingdoms of this world cf. Daniel 2). In other words, Jesus could come at any moment!

12 thoughts on “The ‘Beast’ in the Book of Revelation, He’s Here

  1. I should say, I am still working through the particulars of my own view; but I find what Bauckham articulates quite compelling. I do think that he might minimize the “futuristic” aspect too much, and thus is a little myopic towards the prophetic (and I mean foretelling) reality of the book of Revelation. Yet, I think his practice is ultimatley good and sober; and one that I think should provide some levity to way that “Prophecy” teachers of today approach the book of Revelation.

  2. Bobby, thanks for your closing comment above. I hope you’ll always be β€œworking through the particulars” of your own view. πŸ˜‰

    I am left, having only read this quote, with the impression that Bauckham would have us perceive the Revelation as a first century version of the β€œWizard of Oz”. Does he offer some perspective on John’s place and relative position through these events?

  3. Hey Kc,

    I don’t quite understand what you mean by the “Wizard of Oz” thing. Do you mean that it seems that God is the puppet master in the book of Revelation per Bauckham’s accounting? Yes, John is the central (narrator, messenger) voice for Bauckham’s account; what gave you the impression that this might not be the case. The quote is a summary of about 75 pages of previous development (which of course I can’t share here).

    Btw, what’s your view, Kc? Are you Dispensational? I forget.

  4. Bobby,

    I couldn’t defend any position, in good conscience, and I’m still struggling to remove the inconsistencies in my own perspective.

    To be more specific; Bauckham appears to hold that any specific reference derived from the text can only be valid for the period in which it was written. This implies that if Rome or its ruler is identified as the object of the text then they only serve as a prophetic archetype and have no other significance by virtue of their reference in the text. Given this scenario, prophecy is reduced to simple discernment and prophetic knowledge can be only acquired through observation and not revelation.

    …or have I missed the boat here? πŸ˜‰

    Regarding Johns relative position, does Bauckham see any significance to John being β€œcalled up” in 4:1?

  5. @Kc,

    I don’t disagree with your critique of Bauckham’s approach. I think he fails to appreciate the prophetic nature of the book to a fault. What I appreciate about what Bauckham has to say has to do with his development of the background and original context. But there is no reason someone couldn’t appropriate some of that in constructive ways and not go all the way with him; which is where I am at. I am still historic premil and post-trib, and thus I appreciate the futurist aspect of Revelation much more than Bauckham (I like George E. Ladd quite a bit!).

    On 4:1, he does; but not in the artificial sense that dispensationalists take it (i.e. that this represents the rapture of the church). You don’t see this referring to the “rapture” do you? Even when I was pre-trib I didn’t like this argument. In fact I would say almost all of my pretrib professors at Multnomah didn’t like this “interpretation” of 4:1 either.

  6. @Steve,

    That’s one of the major problems I have with Bauckham. His partial preterism and postmillennialism. I do see some “past” fulfillment of things (like in the historical referent), but I see these historical referents loaded with proleptic weight. Meaning, I think there is still an ultimate eschatological referent that hasn’t been realized yet.

    As I said, I am still working through this stuff, but I will always appreciate Bauckham’s insights!

    I remain historic premil post trib.

  7. @Steve,

    Btw, I have been corresponding with Bauckham via email post your comment here. You prompted me to seek clarification from Bauckham himself; that is if he is in fact post-mil. He is not. He is genuinely open on this question (i.e. whether the future will end on a positive or negative note).

  8. Bobby,

    I admit it would take a pretty hard sell to pry me away from a Premil position, and while I find the Dispensationalist theory concerning John a good fit, I’m presently (gulp) Midtrib by virtue of whay I find as scriptural evidence. πŸ˜‰ My point concerning John centers around the fact that he was in no position to β€œsee” what ultimately β€œmust be hereafter”.

  9. Kc,

    Oh I see what you were getting at with John and “seeing.” Bauckham wouldn’t really argue that way; he argues from the genre that makes up the book of Revelation — like Epistle, Apocalyptic, and Prophetic. And he allows Epistle to dictate his conclusions about the primary referents for the apocalyptic language used in the book. And then it is this prophetic mood, about vindication for Christian martyrs and witnesses throughout the history of the Church, that he sees as paradigmatic for how we should read the prophecy in Revelation (e.g. lacking the kind of detail and chronological order that one finds in premil, dispy or historic, systems of interpretation).

    As far as mid-trib; say it ain’t so. If you’re going to go that route I would urge you to consider the pre-wrath position; which an acquaintance of mine Alan Kurschner, is somewhat of a guru of: http://prewrathrapture.com/ .

    In the love of Christ.

  10. Bobby,

    Maybe I should come up with a new label for my views as I’m neither a 19th century model post-mil, nor am I a current recon/theon model. And since “post”-millennial is somewhat of a misnomer to begin with, maybe that would be just as well. How about Steve-mil? πŸ™‚

    I’m not familiar with Bauckham so it was merely an observation that many in the recon camp hold to similar things. As long as he’s not anathematizing others or holding them in spiritual comtempt for having different views then I’m fine with it.

  11. @Steve,

    Why do you say that post-mil is a misnomer since many, including Stanley Grenz (who wrote “Millennial Maze”), scholars use this nomenclature to signify this position?

    You’ve got to get out more πŸ˜‰ ; Bauckham is this guy: http://richardbauckham.co.uk/ biblical scholar of biblical scholars.

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