The Technicolor Kingdom

God lives in color!

Revelation 4 stands among some of the many dangerous and somewhat confusing chapters of the Bible. Seriously, nothing can drive Christians apart than a little future talk. “After this I looked, and there before me was a door standing open in heaven” (v. 1). It is marked by all the colors you could imagine. John does not see the Kingdom in black and white, but beauty and technicolor.

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Remember the good ole’ days of simple color movies. Revelation is the first “technicolor” scripture (among the likes of Ezekiel in the OT) in the New Testament.

From this chapter…two rules for all Christians to live by:

1) Look! - When you hear a voice, and it appears to come from heaven, look. This is the essence of “fearing God”, being willing to hear his voice and respond, not just hear it. The only sin greater than sin is ignoring the voice of the Lord when you hear it. Why? Think about it. The only thing worse than wrecking your Dads brand new T-bird isn’t nearly as bad as running away. Your dad would rather have a wrecked T-bird than an empty place at the dinner table. This whole letter of John is marked by looking, going, and seeing. He is taken for a heavenly “Cribs” march all the way to the throne of heaven. (Hear heavenly rap playing in the background). “And this is my sweet sound system, and this is my new car, and yeah, check this out, the throne-zone. boo-ya”

The nature of God is such that he really wants to show us around the Kingdom. He has no need to hide it from us. He even says something along the lines of “the keys to the Kingdom of heaven are yours”. Come on in. But in order to come on in…you must look!

2) Go through the Door - Doors are nothing more than movable walls. God sets up a building with four walls right. But the grace of God is this. His buildings are a lot like ours in the sense that there are movable walls, walls that we have permission to walk through. The mean ones in the neighborhood are the ones who lock their doors and never let anyone in. God isn’t like that, at least from this perspective. John gets to go in a look around. He lets us go in and look around.

In the earlier chapter he says, “I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me.” In this chapter, it is John going up to the door of heaven, while Jesus says he stands at our door. Here is the reality:

The door to heaven is opened when the door to our lives is open. Meaning this. Jesus not only stands at our door to come in, he stands at his own door waiting for us to come it. It’s like “the Sims”. In the Sims you have to make friends. And they are your friends only if you have them over first. Well, basically, have Jesus over for dinner and he will let you over to his place. The secret of the the Kingdom is really cool. Jesus has a house with doors, not four unmovable walls.

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