Greek Key Terms:
Context: Revelation 20:11-15 records John's vision of the Great White Throne judgment, the final resolution of history before the new creation (21:1). The scene follows the millennium (20:1-10) and the final defeat of Satan (20:7-10). At the Great White Throne, "the dead, great and small, stand before God" (v.12) — every human being who has ever lived is gathered for final accountability. The sea, death, and Hades give up their dead; every person is judged "according to what they had done, as recorded in the books" (v.12). The Book of Life provides the decisive criterion: those whose names are written there enter the new creation; those whose names are not found are thrown into the lake of fire (vv.14-15). Death and Hades — the entities that have held the dead throughout history — are themselves thrown into the lake of fire, which is "the second death" (v.14). This is the trajectory's final stage: the raising of the dead for judgment and life, and the destruction of death itself. What Hannah declared ("YHWH kills and makes alive"), Elijah/Elisha enacted in isolated signs, Isaiah promised as the eschatological horizon, Jesus enacted in Lazarus, and Paul systematized as firstfruits logic — now reaches absolute consummation: all the dead are raised, death is destroyed, and the new creation begins.
OT-to-OT Development: Revelation 20:11-15 is the consummation of Daniel 12:2 — "multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake, some to everlasting life, others to shame and everlasting contempt" — which is the OT's clearest two-resurrection text (resurrection to life vs. resurrection to judgment). John's "great and small" (v.12) echoes Daniel's "multitudes"; the two books (record of deeds and Book of Life) correspond to Daniel's two destinations (everlasting life vs. shame). Isaiah 25:8 ("He will swallow up death forever") finds its fulfillment in verse 14: "Then death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire." The sea giving up its dead (v.13) may echo the Red Sea as the place of Egypt's death and Israel's deliverance — now all who have drowned in death are delivered to judgment and life. The entire OT trajectory from Genesis 3 (death through Adam) to Isaiah 26:19 (resurrection promised) to Daniel 12:2 (resurrection specified) reaches its completion here.
Connections:
Christological Connection: Revelation 20:11-15 is the raising-the-dead trajectory's final word, and its most important theological feature is what is conspicuously absent: Christ need not pray, stretch out, or speak multiple times. No prophetic effort is required. The dead are raised because death itself is destroyed — "the last enemy" (1 Corinthians 15:26) whose defeat Christ's resurrection inaugurated is now consummated. The Great White Throne is Christ's throne (Revelation 20:11 — John sees "a great white throne and him who sat on it"; cf. Revelation 22:1 where this is "the throne of God and of the Lamb"); the Book of Life is "the Lamb's book of life" (Revelation 21:27). The judge before whom all the dead stand is the one who wept at Lazarus's tomb (John 11:35), who commanded "Lazarus, come out!" (John 11:43), and who declared "I am the resurrection and the life" (John 11:25).
The trajectory's escalation reaches its endpoint here. Elijah raised one child through three-repeated prayer; Elisha raised one child through extended physical effort; Jesus raised Lazarus by command; Peter and Paul raised individuals in Jesus' name. Now the risen Christ raises all the dead — "great and small," those lost at sea and those in Hades — through the final exercise of the life-giving authority He established at His resurrection. Death does not merely release the dead; it is thrown into the lake of fire. The last enemy is not merely defeated but destroyed (1 Corinthians 15:26).
The already/not-yet reaches its resolution. The "already" is Christ's resurrection — the firstfruits event that guaranteed this harvest. The "not-yet" is fully consummated here: "Then death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire" (v.14). Those whose names are in the Lamb's book enter the new creation (21:1-4) where "there will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away" (21:4). The trajectory that began with Hannah singing about YHWH who "kills and makes alive" ends with death itself killed — the final, irreversible demonstration that the Life-Giver has won.
Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment — Revelation 20:11-15 fulfills Isaiah 25:8 ("He will swallow up death forever"), Daniel 12:2 (resurrection of many who sleep), and Jesus' own declaration in John 5:28-29 ("all who are in their graves will hear his voice"). The verbal and conceptual connections are explicit. Also Redemptive-Historical Progression — this is the end-point of the grand narrative arc; the raising-the-dead trajectory reaches its terminus here, and redemptive history moves into the eternal new creation (Revelation 21).
Trajectory Table: 188 - Raising the Dead (Lazarus and the Life-Giver)