You Want Me to Do
What?
When my youngest son was in the fifth grade, he attended a
Christian school. One day he surprised me with this request, “Oh Mom! My
teacher has started having the kids do morning devotions. She said we could get
our parents to come and do the devotions with us. So, I signed you up for
tomorrow. I told my class that you would teach us all about Revelation. We are
reading it right now, so I told my class you had studied it in your Bible Study
and you know everything!”
Wow! What a task…but what confidence from my child. So, the
next morning I would be expected to teach a class of fifth graders “everything”
about the book of Revelation – in twenty minutes. And I had less than twenty
four hours to prepare. The very idea made me laugh and still makes me laugh
today! How does a mother answer such a request? Well, here’s what I did.
First, I explained that the Revelation was the hardest book
in the Bible to understand. I also told the class that actually no one knows
for sure what everything in Revelation means – great Christian scholars
throughout history have studied it and held differing opinions.
Nevertheless, I had studied
it for two years through a Precepts Bible study, and I did have some understanding but it would take too
long to explain it all. So instead, I was going to give them a demonstration of
how a person goes about studying parts of the Bible that are hard to
understand. I explained that the place to go for answers when confused about a
passage in the Bible was other scriptures. I told them it was okay and even
helpful to see what their friends and teachers think, but what really mattered
was what God had to say. God’s thoughts are recorded in the scriptures; the
Bible is His word, so the best thing to do when trying to figure out what God
meant is to read more of His words.
Then I gave the children a little exercise. I told them
Revelation was like the huge puzzle my family works every summer while on
vacation. But when my family works puzzles, we have a box with a picture on it.
We can see what the puzzle is supposed to look like. However, when trying to
figure out Revelation we don’t have a picture to look at, making it a very
difficult task. Still, some of the puzzle pieces can be figured out.
I told them we would solve a tiny piece of the puzzle in
class so they could see how it is done. Then I had my son read Revelation 1:16,
“And in His right hand he held seven
stars and out of His mouth came a sharp two edged sword.” (NASB) I
explained that the person described in this verse is Jesus. We talked a little
about whether the sword coming out of His mouth was a real sword or a symbolic
one. I explained the terms, “tangible” and “intangible”. By a show of hands,
about half of the class thought the sword was tangible and the other half
thought it was intangible. Then, after reminding them that the place to look to
understand scripture was other scripture, I had my son read Hebrews 4:12, “The word of God is quick and powerful and
sharper than a two-edged sword.”(NASB) I asked them what they now thought
the sword coming out of Jesus’ mouth was. One of the kids raised her hand and
said she thought it was the word of God. I agreed, saying that I too thought it
was God’s word. Then I asked again if the sword described in Revelation 1:16
was a tangible or an intangible sword. They all agreed it was intangible.
Next I had my son read Revelation 2:16, “Repent therefore; or else I am coming quickly and I will make war
against them with the sword of My mouth.”(NASB) and Revelation 19:15, “And from His mouth comes a two-edged sword.
So that it may smite the nations…” (NASB) I asked them one more time if
this sword was tangible or intangible. They were stumped!
So I explained the terms finite and infinite and the fact
that our knowledge is finite - or limited, but God’s is infinite - or without
limits. I concluded by saying that even though we have trouble understanding
this, God doesn’t. But what we can say for certain is that the two edged sword
coming out of Jesus’ mouth is the
word of God. Yet, it is somehow also a powerful weapon; so powerful in fact
that it can smite the nations!
I don’t know about the kids but the experience was loads of
fun for me!
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