Revelation 7:9-17 · The Great Multitude in White Robes
Who Are Those Strangers In White Robes?
Revelation 7:9-17
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

A couple of years back a movie came out that had phones ringing all over this nation. The movie was "Bruce Almighty." And the reason phones were ringing was that, for the first time, Hollywood published God's phone number. In the movie, a TV newsman played by Jim Carrey is endowed by God with divine powers, allowing him to perform such feats as parting a bowl of tomato soup like the Red Sea. God's phone number is repeatedly displayed on Carrey's pager whenever the Lord tries to summon him.

Usually, movies and TV shows use the telephone exchange 555, which is not used for homes and businesses. But "Bruce Almighty" used a seven-digit number valid in many parts of the country. Many moviegoers remembered the number and put it to work in their own area codes in order to communicate with God. A woman in Pinellas Park, Florida, threatened to sue the movie studio because of the 20 calls per hour clogging her cell phone. In Sanford, N.C., the listing belongs to a church whose minister is actually named Bruce. And he was not amused. A Denver radio network, which also had this number, received dozens of calls a day. "God, I really need to talk to you," one woman said in a message. "I need to repent because I've cheated on my husband five times, but I guess all of us people who are prostitutes eventually cheat on our husbands."

Universal Pictures, the studio which produced the film, said in a statement that the phone number was chosen because it does not exist in the Buffalo, New York, area, where the movie was filmed. The studio offered no further comment.

(1) This is the second Sunday in our Touching God series based on selected passages from the book of Revelation. It is clear that many people in our world want desperately to reach out and touch God. How do we do that? We began last week where we must begin. "Worthy is the Lamb." In order to touch God, we must begin with Jesus. He alone reveals God's character and love. He is the model of abundant life. And he alone makes it possible for us to have life without end.

Today we move to the next step in touching God. And the answer is found in our lesson for today. Let me read a portion of that lesson: "After this I looked, and there was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, robed in white, with palm branches in their hands.

They cried out in a loud voice, saying, "˜Salvation belongs to our God who is seated on the throne, and to the Lamb' . . . Then one of the elders addressed me, saying, "˜Who are these, robed in white, and where have they come from?' I said to him, "˜Sir, you are the one that knows.' Then he said to me, "˜These are they who have come out of the great ordeal; they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb . . .'" Who are those strangers in white robes? Those are Christ's followers, those who believe on his name, those who have committed themselves to his service. In short, those in white robes are his church, his body, his bride. When you want to touch God, you do it within the context of the body of believers.

You and I did not come to faith on our own. Do you understand that? The reason you and I can approach God today is because of a line of believers reaching back more than 2,000 years who--sometimes at great risk to themselves--kept the faith and transmitted it to those who came after them. Some of these people lived hard lives, but they never gave up on God. And God never gave up on them. And now they rest from their labors and have communion with God. The scene reminds me of something sports commentator and comedian Dennis Miller once said. He had attended an NFL Football Hall of Fame dinner.

Afterward he remarked, "It really tears at your heartstrings when you see how many of them limp. The price they paid for greatness is touching." (2) Many of those dressed in white robes at one time walked with limps. Notice how they are described: "These are they who have come out of the great ordeal; they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb . . ." "The great ordeal . . ." We don't know specifically what ordeal John is referring to, but it reminds us that many of the greatest saints who ever lived knew hard times and suffering. Nobody ever promised that following Christ would make us exempt from the sufferings of the world. In fact, it is while coming through a great ordeal that many people touch God. This is an important truth. Many of us feel that our lives should be much easier than they are. Perhaps you have challenges on your job, or maybe you're facing some sort of health crisis. Maybe someone you love is hurting deeply. Maybe you feel you can't handle much more in the way of disappointment. Welcome to the human race! Life is sometimes very, very hard. But you say, "I'm a Christian. I am one of God's people. Things should be easier for me than this." Again, welcome to the real world. Christians suffer just like everyone else. God is no respecter of persons. Many of His finest saints have gone through a great ordeal and found their faith strengthened in the process. National Geographic carried a story about the Sherpa people of Nepal who live in the shadow of Mount Everest. Sherpas must travel rocky mountain trails every day to get to the market, to school or to work, or to visit family. A Western journalist visiting among the Sherpa people asked numerous citizens why they did not create paved roads in their villages. Surely this would make their lives easier.

Their answer is encapsulated in the response of one Sherpa man: "If we rode a bus in Khumbu, would we still feel the steepness of our mountains? Would we still hear the waterfalls coming down our cliffs? Would we stop and say a prayer when we passed a (prayer) stone?"

To the Sherpa people, their way of living kept them connected to the truly essential, spiritual aspects of life. The building of roads might make their lives easier, but it would cause them to lose the rich and sacred rhythms of life. (3) It may be that the very ease of modern life is the greatest barrier to our touching God. So many saints have discovered that they really did not know the depths of God's love until they went through a time of real trial. If you are going to touch God, you're going to have to accept much in life that you don't want to accept, and trust that there is set aside for you a robe by a loving God.

But notice something else. These people dressed in white robes were never perfect. This is important. Many of us think of saints as being perfect. They may be perfect now, but they weren't while they were here on earth. They suffered and they made mistakes just like you and I. They said things they wish they had never said. They did things they wished they had never done. A man sat in a bar downing one drink after another. The man on the barstool next to him asked, "What's wrong?" The first man said, "I'm drinking to the memory of my wife. She was a saint on earth. She went to church every single morning, spent her days reading and quoting the scriptures, sang hymns and psalms all evening, filled our house with religious statues and paintings, and invited priests and nuns to dinner three times a week."

"She sounds like an angel," the second man commented, "I suppose the good Lord took her early to Himself." "No," the first man replied. "I strangled her."

Sainthood isn't about singing hymns and reading scripture and chanting prayers all day long. Sainthood is about making a difference in the world. It is about serving God and about following in the steps of Jesus. Those in white robes were not perfect. That is why it was necessary for them to wash their robes in the blood of the Lamb. They needed to confess their sins and experience God's complete and unconditional forgiveness. And that's good for us to remember. Because we aren't perfect. But God can still use us. Our name can still be written in the Lamb's book of life. In Six Hours One Friday, Max Lucado wrote of a friend named Joy who taught a Sunday school class in an underprivileged area. Joy had in her class a timid, nine-year-old girl named Barbara. Lucado writes: [Barbara's] difficult home life had left her afraid and insecure. For the weeks that my friend was teaching the class, Barbara never spoke. Never. While the other children talked, she sat. While the others sang, she was silent. While the others giggled, she was quiet. Always present. Always listening. Always speechless. Until the day Joy gave a class on heaven. Joy talked about seeing God. She talked about tearless eyes and deathless lives. Barbara was fascinated. She wouldn't release Joy from her stare. She listened with hunger. Then she raised her hand. "Mrs. Joy?"

Joy was stunned. Barbara had never asked a question. "Yes, Barbara?"

Barbara asked quietly, "Is heaven for girls like me?"

Says Max Lucado, "Barbara couldn't be more qualified." (4)

The promises of God are for people like you and me. Those dressed in white robes before the throne of God suffered as we suffered and they made mistakes as we make mistakes, but their suffering and their sinfulness made them aware of their dependence on God, and out of their weakness they experienced a strength that the world cannot know. Because they found that God was with them.

And one thing more about these dressed in white robes--they are part of a fellowship. Here again, this is so important. We are part of an individualistic culture. A Lone Ranger culture. And this extends to our religion. Many people confuse touching God with a pleasant, wistful feeling. And so we say, I can experience God on the golf course or on a mountaintop or at the beach just as easily as I can in church. But I have to warn you, the two are not synonymous. A warm, fuzzy feeling is not the same as being in the presence of Holiness. Jesus never promised that where one person is on a golf course somewhere by himself that "I will be there also." No, he said, "Wherever two or three are gathered together in my name, there I am also."

You may find this unsettling, but it is biblical faith. We touch God, first through Jesus, and then we touched God through the fellowship of saints. You and I were designed for worship and fellowship--and through the mingling of those two experiences we find God.

There was an interesting tidbit in Time magazine recently about Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart is one of America's biggest retailers, and its aim is to eventually conquer the world market. But Wal-Mart's leaders have found that the "Wal-Mart culture" doesn't translate well in every language. For instance, Wal-Mart has suffered numerous setbacks in Germany. Cheerful store greeters and helpful clerks--a staple of the Wal-Mart culture--were considered rude and pushy in Germany. The Germans want to be left alone when they shop.

But in China, the Wal-Mart culture has thrived. In fact, Wal-Mart employees in one store in China start each day with a rousing song that can be translated, "My heart is filled with pride . . . I long to tell you how deep my love for Wal-Mart is."

(5) Can you imagine that? Hundreds of Chinese men and women starting each work day singing with emotion, "I long to tell you how deep my love for Wal-Mart is?" Can you imagine followers of Jesus Christ who do not come together on a regular basis to sing, "I long to tell you how deep my love for Jesus is?" Let's get real. Those dressed in white robes were not worshiping for the first time in Heaven. They were continuing a practice they had followed religiously when they were here. Where do we touch God? We touch God in the life of Jesus of Nazareth. We touch God when we are going through a great ordeal and have nowhere else to turn. We touch God when we realize our imperfection, and we humble ourselves to confess our sins and ask for God's gracious mercy. We touch God in authentic worship, where with other believers we lift our hymns and prayers of praise. [As we sing our final hymn this day with our friends and fellow saints, let's affirm our connection to those dressed in white robes who this day rest from their labor and worship in praise before the throne of God.]


1. The Knoxville News Sentinel, May 29, 2003, p. A8.

2. "Why Rules Fail" by Dr. Robert R. Kopp, Oct. 1, 2000, p. 5.

3. "The Sherpas" by T. R. Reid, May 2003, p.71.

4. Contemporary Illustrations for Preachers, Teachers, & Writers. Craig Brian Larson, ed. (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 1996), 103.

5. "Can Wal-Mart Get Any Bigger?" by Bill Saporito, Time January 13, 2003, p. 42.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan