Context: Revelation 21:24-26 sits within the vision of the New Jerusalem descending from heaven (21:1-22:5), the consummation toward which the whole of biblical redemptive history moves. The vision follows the destruction of death and Hades (20:11-15) and the renewal of all creation (21:1-8). John describes the city in temple imagery — twelve gates, twelve foundations, cubic dimensions that recall the Most Holy Place — but then makes the striking declaration that "I saw no temple in the city, for its temple is the Lord God the Almighty and the Lamb" (21:22). Into that temple-city vision verses 24-26 release three climactic images: (a) "the nations (τὰ ἔθνη) will walk by its light"; (b) "the kings of the earth will bring their glory into it"; and (c) "its gates will never be shut by day — and there will be no night there... they will bring into it the glory and the honor of the nations." Verse 27 adds the qualification: "But nothing unclean will ever enter it, nor anyone who does what is detestable or false, but only those who are written in the Lamb's book of life." Three details are decisive for the Cyrus trajectory: (1) the vision quotes Isa 60:3, 5, 11 virtually verbatim — light, nations, kings, glory, gates-never-shut are all Isaiah 60's vocabulary in sequence; (2) "kings of the earth" (βασιλεῖς τῆς γῆς) elsewhere in Revelation names the hostile rulers who commit fornication with Babylon (17:2, 18; 18:3, 9) — and these hostile kings are now the ones bringing glory in, a reversal as startling as Isaiah's application of mashiach to Cyrus; (3) the city whose gates are never shut no longer needs walls against enemies, because death and darkness are destroyed.
Greek Key Terms:
Connections:
Christological Connection: Revelation 21:24-26 is the eschatological resolution of all three hermeneutical threads the Cyrus trajectory carries. (a) Promise-Fulfillment: Isaiah 60's kings-bringing-tribute oracle, partially realized in Cyrus's decree funding the temple (Ezra 1:4) and in Haggai's post-exilic expectation (Hag 2:7), reaches its cosmic consummation here — the Isaiah 60 vocabulary is lifted verbatim and applied to the New Jerusalem. (b) Longitudinal Theme: the Gentile-kings-serving-Zion motif that runs from Ps 72 through Isa 2, 49, 60, Hag 2, Zech 14 — with Cyrus as the most dramatic OT historical foretaste — here receives its eschatological terminus. (c) Contrast-dissolved: in Isaiah 45, mashiach applied to Cyrus was startling precisely because the pagan king "did not know" YHWH; in Revelation 21, the kings of the earth (elsewhere Revelation's hostile rulers) are reconciled — their rebellion broken, their tribute freely rendered. What was contrastive in the Cyrus event (pagan instrument who doesn't know God) is in the consummation overcome (kings who bring glory to the Lamb they know).
The city's three defining features carry theological weight. Light: the Lamb is the city's lamp (21:23), fulfilling Isaiah 60:19 ("the LORD will be your everlasting light") and Simeon's phōs eis apokalypsin ethnōn (Luke 2:32). The light by which the nations walk is Christ's own glory, not derivative illumination. Kings bringing glory: in a city where "the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are its temple" (21:22), the former hostile rulers now do what Cyrus's decree only faintly foreshadowed — bring their honor into the presence of the God they now know. Cyrus's physical gold and silver for the temple was a token; the eschatological kings bring the doxa of the nations themselves, all culture redeemed and offered. Open gates: Isaiah 60:11 promised Zion's gates "shall be open continually; day and night they shall not be shut"; John takes that promise as already fulfilled in the new creation. Gates are shut against enemies and at night; neither condition obtains any longer. The city is permanently welcoming because death and darkness are defeated.
Already: the gospel-ingathering is Rev 21:24 in progress. The church is a foretaste-community drawn from every nation, and every Gentile convert is the Isaiah-60-Revelation-21 trajectory advancing. Not yet: the kings' tribute-bringing awaits the Lamb's return; the cosmic consummation of the motif Cyrus's decree faintly initiated is still forward. The Cyrus event was a "dim rehearsal" (Kline) of the reality this text describes.
Connection Method(s): Longitudinal Theme (consummation) — Revelation 21:24-26 is the eschatological terminus of the Gentile-kings-serving-Zion motif that runs canon-wide from Ps 72 through Isa 60 to this text; within the Cyrus trajectory specifically, it is the end toward which the Cyrus foretaste was always pointing. Also Promise-Fulfillment — John directly reuses Isaiah 60:3, 5, 11 vocabulary, identifying the New Jerusalem as the fulfillment of Isaiah's oracle. Also Redemptive-Historical Progression — this is the trajectory's final stage, the end-point of the whole narrative arc from Zion's exile and Cyrus's partial-restoration decree to the city whose temple is the Lamb and whose gates are never shut. ANTI-DEFAULT CHECK: Typology is not claimed. Rev 21:24-26 is the consummation pole; if anything is a type, it is the Cyrus event looking forward to this — but the trajectory has already been emphatic that Cyrus is not a typological shadow of Christ but a historical instrument within a longitudinal theme. The Cyrus-to-Rev-21 line is longitudinal-theme-with-promise-fulfillment, not type-to-antitype.
Trajectory Table: 040 - Cyrus (Gentile Deliverer)