But there was a new heaven and a new earth; but no more sea-no separation,
nor part of the world not brought into an ordered earth before God. Here we
do not find any mediatorial kingdom. The Lamb is not in the scene. God is
all in all. No sorrow or crying more, no earthly people of God distinct
from the inhabiters of the earth. These are God's people, and God is with
them Himself, but withal His tabernacle is with them. This is the holy
city, the New Jerusalem. The assembly has her own character, is the
habitation of God in a special way, when the unchanging state comes, and
all is made new. God is the end, as the beginning. Him that is athirst now
God will refresh with the fountain of the water of life-the overcomer shall
inherit all things. The world for the Christian is now a great Rephidim.
This is the twofold portion of the final blessedness: he shall have God for
his God, and be His son. Those who feared this path-did not overcome the
world and Satan but had walked in iniquity-would have their part in the
lake of fire. This closes the history of God's ways.
What follows is the description of the heavenly city, as before we had that
of Babylon. Its heavenly character and millennial connection with the earth
is revealed. One of the seven angels, as in the case of Babylon, comes to
shew the prophet the bride, the Lamb's wife. The result of judgment on the
earth is the introduction of better and higher blessings. The prophet is
taken, like Moses, to see the scene of promise, and sees New Jerusalem
descending out of heaven from God. This was its double character from God,
divine in its origin, and also heavenly. (Compare 2 Cor 5:1) It might be of
God and earthly. It might be heavenly and angelic. It was neither: it was
divine in origin and heavenly in nature and character. It was clothed with
divine glory: it must be as founded on Christ's work. It was transparent
jasper, jasper being used as a symbol of divine glory. (Chap. 4:3) It is
secure, having a wall great and high. It has twelve gates. Angels are
become the willing doorkeepers of the great city, the fruit of Christ's
redemption work in glory. This marked the possession too, by man thus
brought in the assembly to glory, of the highest place in the creation, and
providential order of God, of which angels had previously been the
administrators. The twelve gates are full of human perfectness of
governmental administrative power. The gate was the place of judgment.
Twelve, we have often seen,denotes perfection and governmental power. The
character of it is noted by the names of the twelve tribes. God had so
governed these. They were not the foundation; but this character of power
was found there. There were twelve foundations, but these were the twelve
apostles of the Lamb. They were, in their work, the foundation of the
heavenly city. Thus the creative and providential display of power, the
governmental (Jehovah), and the assembly once founded at Jerusalem, are all
brought together in the heavenly city, the organized seat of heavenly
power. It is not presented as the bride, though it be the bride, the Lamb's
wife. It is not in the Pauline character of nearness of blessing to Christ.
It is the assembly as founded at Jerusalem under the twelve- the organized
seat of heavenly power, the new and now heavenly capital of God's
government. They had suffered and served the Lamb in the earthly, and under
Him founded the heavenly. It is alike vast and perfect, and all measured
and owned of God. It is not now a remnant measured; it is the city. It has
not divine perfectness (that could not be), but it has divinely given
perfectness. It is a cube, equal on every side, finite perfection. So the
wall (they are merely symbols) was perfect, 12 x 12. The wall which secured
it was the divine glory. As it is written of the earthly Jerusalem,
"Salvation hath God appointed for walls and bulwarks."
The city was formed, in its nature, in divine righteousness and
holiness-gold transparent as glass. That which was now by the word wrought
in and applied to men below, was the very nature of the whole place.
(Compare Eph.4:24.) The precious stones, or varied display of God's nature,
who is light, in connection with the creature (seen in creation, Ezekiel
28; in grace in the high priest's breast-plate), now shone in permanent
glory, and adorned the foundations of the city. The gates had the moral
beauty, which attracted Christ in the assembly and in a glorious way. That
on which men walked, instead of bringing danger of defilement, was itself
righteous and holy; the streets, all that men came in contact with, were
righteousness and holiness-gold transparent as glass.
There was no concealment of God's glory in that which awed by its
display-no temple where men approached but where they could not draw nigh
where God was hidden. The Lord God Almighty and the Lamb were its temple.
They were approached in their own nature and glory, surrounded only by that
fully displayed.
Nor was there need of created light here; the glory of the divine nature
lighted all, and the Lamb was the light-bearer in it.
Note here, we have not the Father as the temple. It is the revealed
dispensational Ruler, the true God and the Lamb who has made good His
glory. This was the character of the city.
The vision goes on to shew its relationship to those on the earth, and its
inhabitants: a seeming inconsistency, but no real one; for the city is
viewed as the estate of the bride. Where the inhabitants are spoken of, it
is the individual blessing. The nations, spared in the judgments on earth,
walk in the light of it; the world does, in a measure, in that of the
assembly now, Then the glory will be perfect. The city enjoys the direct
light within; the world transmitted light of glory. To it the kings of the
earth bring their honour and glory. They own the heavens and the heavenly
kingdom to be the source of all, and bring there the homage of their power.
Night, there is not there, and its gates are ever open; no defense against
evil is needed, though divine security leaves no approach to evil. The
kings themselves bring their willing homage to it. But the glory and honour
of the Gentiles is brought to it too. Heaven is seen as the source of all
the glory and honour of this world. Hence these are now true. Nothing
defiling enters there, nor what introduces idols and falsehood. Neither
man's evil nor Satan's deceit can exist or produce any corruption there.
How often, when any thing good is set up now, the considerate heart knows
that evil will enter, and Satan deceive and corrupt! There we have the
certainty that this can never be. It was not merely the absence of evil,
but the impossibility of its entrance, which characterised the holy city.
There was that which, having its source in perfect grace, involves all
blessed affections in connection with the Lamb in those within the city.
Those only whose names were in the Lamb's book of life found place in the
city.