Revelation 1:4-8 · Greetings and Doxology
Between The Parentheses
Revelation 1:4-8
Sermon
by William G. Carter
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Whenever a preacher announces a sermon text from the book of Revelation, a lot of people grow nervous. Revelation is widely regarded as the most confusing book in the Bible. The book is chock-full of strange visions, eerie sounds, and jolting images. Wild-eyed interpreters have offered curious interpretations of the future, turning to Revelation and neglecting the rest of the Bible. In short, the book of Revelation has been considered a happy hunting ground for heretics. It is no wonder that many Christians are afraid of their own book.

Even so, the book of Revelation may also be one of our great undiscovered treasures. It was first addressed as a letter to the church during uncertain and dangerous times. The original name of the book is the "Apocalypse," which means a disclosure. In the Bible, an apocalypse is a moment when God pulls back the curtain that hides heaven from earth. The Revelation offers glimpses of a holy reality which is normally hid from our eyes.

Today we hear a voice from heaven announcing, "I am the Alpha and the Omega." That unusual expression appears three times in the final book of the Bible. Each time the voice speaks, we learn something about God that is crucial to our faith and life.

The first insight has to do with a simple observation about language. When God says, "I am the Alpha and Omega," alumni/ae of college fraternities may sit up straight in their pews, for they hear God equating himself with two letters from the Greek alphabet. In a Bible full of words, God announces he is made known through the letters from human alphabets. These letters combine into words. Words are spoken. God's speech makes a world. That is how it was in the beginning, and how it shall be in God's new creation. The primary tools used by the Creator of heaven and earth are words. Whenever God speaks, something happens.

In one of his autobiographical reflections, Frederick Buechner reflects on the power of God to create each new day. It is a creative, holy force expressed through words. As he writes:

Darkness was upon the face of the deep, and God said, "Let there be light." Darkness laps at my sleeping face like a tide, and God says, "Let there be Buechner." Why not? Out of the primeval chaos of sleep (God) calls me to be a life again...To wake up is to be given back your life again. To wake up is to be given back the world again and of all possible worlds this world...Waking into the new day, we are all of us Adam on the morning of creation, and the world is ours to name. Out of many fragments we are called to put back together a self again.1

Every morning, the word that puts us back together is the same word that spoke the world into being. If God has been around since the first day of creation, God has seen it all, heard it all, and spoken it all. Certainly God does not speak any new words that he has not spoken before. In fact, when God declares, "I am the Alpha and the Omega," the words echo a passage from the prophet Isaiah's poetry where God says, "I am the first and the last" (Isaiah 44:6).

As scholars point out, there is no new word spoken in the book of Revelation. Of the 404 verses of this book, there are 518 allusions to earlier passages of scripture.2 The writer of this book points to the books of Exodus, Daniel, Zechariah, and the Psalms, among others. John does not simply string together words from other books, so much as he points to the one Word in which all other words are held together. Ever since Genesis, God has spoken a lot of words. By the time we arrive at the book of Revelation, only one Word captures all God has to say, and that is the Word made flesh, Jesus Christ. John points us to Jesus as the central Word in the vocabulary of faith.

This insight offers a constant reminder to the church about the integrating center of all we proclaim. In a certain church, the pastor stood at the door after worship one Sunday, waiting for compliments on the weekly homiletical masterpiece. The response did not come as expected. In desperation, the preacher turned to a wise friend from the congregation and asked, "How did I do this morning?" The friend shrugged the shoulders and mumbled a few pleasantries. These words also did not satisfy, so the preacher said, "No, really, I want to know what you thought of what I said in my sermon today."

"Sorry," said the friend, "I wasn't listening to you; I was too busy paying attention to Jesus."

Now, that is good preaching. Behind every preacher, prayer, or scripture passage, the wise person listens for the Word beyond all human words. Jesus Christ is "the one Word of God which we have to hear and which we have to trust and obey in life and in death."3 When God reveals himself as the Alpha and the Omega, he tells us first and foremost that he draws near through words which point to Jesus Christ.

Yet something more can be said. Alpha and Omega are more than mere letters in the alphabet; they are the first and last letters. In fact, no sooner does God say, "I am the Alpha and the Omega," than a voice in a vision goes on to say, "I am the first and the last" (Revelation 1:17, 22:13). God alone speaks the first and last words on human life. No other person, power, or principality can say what God alone can say.

In April 1995, there was a baptism in the Russian city of Ananuri. With little fanfare or advance notice, Pavel Grachev, the Russian defense minister, walked into an Orthodox church and asked to be baptized. "It took place quite unexpectedly," noted a church official. Grachev was a commander of Soviet occupation forces in Afghanistan for five years. During the war in Chechnya, he was widely criticized for his army's brutality. He went to Ananuri to sign an agreement on the shared use of military bases. By the end of that week, Grachev had been baptized.4

By all appearances, Grachev was a soldier in search of a war. But now he has been claimed in the strong name of the Trinity through water and the Word. Who knows what will happen next? Now that he has been baptized, there may be a day when the Russian defense minister stands up to say, "I have decided wars, weapons, and armies are a bad idea. Once we thought they were necessary, but now they are obsolete. So I call upon all nations of the world to join me in beating our swords into plowshares."

That may sound naive. "After all," critics say, "it was only a baptism, some water splashed on a soldier's brow." But what if God is good for his promises? What if God begins to intrude upon Grachev's career and moves us closer to the final day of peace? What if God has the first word and last laugh on Grachev's life?

"I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last" (Revelation 22:13). The faithful church lives in this promise. While Revelation is full of unsettling visions and disturbing pictures, the first word of this book is identical to the last word. The beginning and the end are the same. As the writer addresses this book to the church, he greets them by saying, "Grace to you, and peace from him who is, and who was, and who is to come" (Revelation 1:4). As the book comes to an end, the last words are, "The grace of the Lord Jesus be with all the saints." In between there is much in this book that unsettles a sensitive stomach. But the first word and the last word are the same . . . and the word is grace. It is a word that God alone can say.

Like all the words God speaks, grace is a word that makes sense only when we look to Jesus Christ. Through Christ, God is relentlessly inclined in our favor. According to our text, Jesus is the "faithful witness" who points to the truth of God's love. He is "the firstborn of the dead," who has opened the way of resurrection. Jesus is ruler over the earth's royalty, exalted as King of kings and Lord of lords. He is "the One who loves us," and "the One who sets us free by his blood." He makes us to be a kingdom of priests. He is coming so that every eye will see him.

The work of grace is not finished yet. Sometimes our world seems enchanted with its own destruction. Yet for a few moments this morning the curtain is drawn back and we catch a glimpse of how God pursues us through the love of Jesus Christ. Thanks to such grace, we belong to a God who has set us free and will never let us go.

Yet one thing more must be said. God says, "I am the Alpha and the Omega," and promises to speak to us the ancient word that makes all things new. God alone speaks the first and last word on human existence, which is a surprisingly gracious word. The third time God says, "I am the Alpha and the Omega," he affirms, "I am the beginning and the end" (Revelation 22:13, 21:6). Perhaps this is our greatest hope: that God will be both our source and our destination. Through the grace of Christ our king, we trust that the God who gave us birth will complete and finish our lives.

Daily problems can blur our vision. When caught up in neighborhood scandals or shady deals, we may forget the One who made us. When a day care center blows up in Oklahoma City, we think, "What's this world coming to?" Listen: every day is full of enough hassles and horrors to shake up the strongest soul. Each one of us needs a place to stand and a promise to cling to.

Some days all we can do is hang on by our fingernails, and trust the One "who is, who was, who is to come." We hope for God, and remember God. We remember God's saving history and hope for God's final victory. As one of the great hymns of the church has expressed the essence of faith,

Through many dangers, toils, and snares,
I have already come;
'Tis grace has led me safe thus far,
and grace will lead me home.5

The late New Testament scholar Joachim Jeremias grew up as a child of German missionaries in Israel. When the Third Reich came to power, the relationship between the German people and the Jewish people became hostile and painful. The family left. Then came the second world war and the Holocaust. Years later, Jeremias wished to return to Israel. He wanted to see if anybody remembered him as a young person, and would say to him, "Joachim, we forgive you."

He said, "I returned to Israel long after the war. I knocked on door after door. I couldn't find anybody. I came to one house and thought surely someone is here, and they will let me in. I knocked and a man answered. I remembered him. "I'm Joachim Jeremias." The man said, "Please come in."

"It is good you came at this time," said the Jewish host. "We are celebrating the feast of Succoth, which is the festival of tabernacles. Come into our back yard."

The family had erected a booth for the feast. There was a brush arbor, with fruit hanging down. The family would enter through a little doorway and tell the story of Israel's life in the wilderness. Professor Jeremias noticed a little piece of paper clipped to one side of the doorway, and another piece of paper clipped to the other side of the doorway. There was a word on one side and another word on the other side. The words were in Hebrew. Jeremias asked his host, "What are those words?"

He replied, "That is a summary of Psalm 139: 'Where can I go from your spirit? Or where can I flee from your presence? If I ascend to heaven, you are there; if I make my bed in Sheol, you are there. If I take the wings of the morning and settle at the farthest limits of the sea, even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me fast'" (Psalm 139:7-10).

Jeremias said, "I don't understand." The man said, "Well, that word on the left is 'from God.' This word on the right is 'to God.' In between, we live from God . . . to God."6

Those are the parentheses around my life and your life. We live "from God to God." Our final destination is to arrive at the Source of our life. The aim of every life is to return to the God from whom all things were made, and in whose purposes all creation shall be completed. In between new creation and final consummation, we have a place to stand and a promise to claim. We belong to God, the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end. And as poet T. S. Eliot once wrote:

... the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.7


1. Frederick Buechner, The Alphabet of Grace (New York: The Seabury Press, 1970), pp. 21-22.

2. Eugene H. Peterson, Reversed Thunder: The Revelation of John and the Praying Imagination (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1988), pp. 22-23.

3. "Theological Declaration of Barmen," The Book of Confessions (Louisville: Presbyterian Church USA, 1991) 8.11.

4. "Russian Defense Minister Baptized," Ecumenical News International 18 April 1995.

5. Presbyterian Hymnal (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1990), p. 280.

6. I am grateful to Fred B. Craddock for this story.

7. T. S. Eliot, "Little Gidding," Four Quartets (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1943), p. 59.

CSS Publishing Company, NO BOX SEATS IN THE KINGDOM, by William G. Carter