0 5 mins 1 week

📘 Lesson 3 – Images From Marriage

3.5 The Harlot Is Judged

The End of Unfaithfulness – The Wedding of the Lamb and the Triumph of Love


🟩 Introduction – Two Feasts, One God

Two images. Two stories. Two destinies.
Revelation 19 presents both: the end of “Babylon the Harlot”—the symbol of unfaithful religious systems—and at the same time the marriage of the Lamb to His Bride, the church. What a tension: judgment and wedding in a single chapter. Destruction and eternal love. Yet in this lies the depth of God’s character—justice and grace are not opposites, but two sides of the same holy being.


📖 Bible Study – Questions & Answers

Question 1: Revelation 19:1–9 – How can the fall of the Harlot and the wedding of the Lamb both demonstrate justice and love?
Because God is not a tyrannical judge but a holy Husband who has waited patiently. Babylon’s downfall is not vindictive revenge but the inevitable result of a long, grace-filled rejection. The wedding feast is the long-awaited moment when faithfulness is rewarded—both God’s and His Bride’s. Both events show that God honors our choices, yet He also fulfills His promises. One ends in separation, the other in union—both are perfectly just.

Question 2: Revelation 21:1–4 – What does the marriage image here mean, and why is it full of hope?
Here marriage symbolizes the final unity of God with His redeemed people. No more tears of separation. No false gods. No distance. The Bridegroom is present with His Bride, and nothing can ever part them again. Tears are wiped away, and death is no more. This promise rests not on wishful thinking but on the Word of the One who never fails.

Question 3: 1 Peter 1:18–19 – What assurance does Christ’s sacrifice give us?
We were not purchased with gold or silver but with the precious blood of Christ. The cross was not a symbol—it was the payment. That gives us absolute confidence, because God was willing to give the most valuable thing He had. If He loves us so deeply, He will surely bring to pass what He has promised: eternal life at His side.


✹ Spiritual Principles

  • God’s patience is great—but it is not infinite.

  • Revelation shows that grace has boundaries, though only after many warnings.

  • Judgment and love are not contradictory: God purifies not out of hatred, but to protect His Bride.

  • Our true beauty is His righteousness: we are Bride only when we wear His garments, not our own deeds.


🧭 Practical Application

  • Do not take God’s grace for granted.

  • When you hear His invitation, say “Yes”—before the door closes.

  • Remain spiritually faithful. In a world of distractions and false idols, faithfulness to Jesus is a daily decision.

  • Be a bearer of hope: the Lamb’s wedding feast is your future. Live today so others will long to be invited.


✅ Conclusion – Judgment Is Not the End but the Beginning

God destroys Babylon to make room for the New Jerusalem.
He judges the harlot to rescue His Bride.
He celebrates a wedding because His heart longs for fellowship, not distance.


💬 Thought of the Day

God’s final act is not punishment—it is a wedding.


✍ Illustration – The Invitation in the CafĂ©

Frankfurt. Early evening.

Anna sits alone in a cafĂ©, a glass of water at her side, a crumpled note in her hand. No sender—just one line:

“You are invited. Revelation 19:9.”

Curious, she opens her Bible app and types in the verse:

“Blessed are those who are invited to the marriage feast of the Lamb.”

She smiles softly. What an absurd invitation. A wedding? She—twice divorced, her faith in tatters?

She scrolls on to Revelation 21: No more death. No more pain. No more tears. A Bridegroom who remains.

Suddenly the cafĂ© seems brighter—not because the world has changed, but because she dares to believe she is invited.
Not for who she once was—but for what He has done.

And in that moment, she begins to love Him back.

📖 “Blessed are those who are invited to the marriage feast of the Lamb.” – Revelation 19:9

 

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