✦ The Hyperlinked Bible

Revelation 11:15; Revelation 19:16

Greek Key Terms:

  • G932 βασιλεία (basileia) - "kingdom"
  • G2889 κόσμος (kosmos) - "world"
  • G5547 Χριστός (Christos) - "Christ, Anointed One"
  • G936 βασιλεύω (basileuō) - "to reign, be king"
  • G165 αἰών (aiōn) - "age, eternity"
  • G935 βασιλεύς (basileus) - "king"
  • G2962 κύριος (kyrios) - "lord, master"
  • G3686 ὄνομα (onoma) - "name"
  • G1125 γράφω (graphō) - "to write"
  • G3382 μηρός (mēros) - "thigh"
  • G2440 ἱμάτιον (himation) - "garment"

Context: Revelation 11:15 announces the consummation: "The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever" (εἰς τοὺς αἰῶνας τῶν αἰώνων). Revelation 19:16 depicts Christ's return as conquering King: "On His robe and on His thigh He has a name written, 'King of kings and Lord of lords.'" These verses portray the eternal, universal kingship that contrasts utterly with Saul's temporary, failed reign.

OT-to-OT Development:

  • Saul reigned forty years over one nation; Christ reigns "forever and ever" over "the kingdom of the world."
  • Saul was given the kingdom by human demand and divine permission; Christ's kingdom is established by divine decree from eternity (Ps 2:6-7; Dan 7:14).
  • The title "King of kings" echoes Daniel's use for pagan emperors (Dan 2:37) but surpasses them—Christ is the ultimate sovereign.

Connections:

  • TO OT: Psalm 2:6-7 (I have set My King on Zion), Daniel 7:14 (everlasting dominion), Daniel 2:37, 44 (king of kings, kingdom that shall never be destroyed)
  • FROM OT: 1 Samuel 15:28 (kingdom torn from Saul and given to another)—now given to Christ eternally
  • PARALLEL: Matthew 28:18 (all authority given to Me), 1 Timothy 6:15 (King of kings and Lord of lords), Revelation 17:14 (Lamb is Lord of lords and King of kings)

Christological Connection: Revelation's vision of Christ's kingship is the ultimate contrast to Saul's failed reign. (1) "Forever and Ever": Saul's kingdom lasted forty years and was torn away; Christ "shall reign forever and ever" (εἰς τοὺς αἰῶνας τῶν αἰώνων). (2) "Kingdom of the World": Saul ruled one small nation; Christ rules "the kingdom of the world"—universal dominion. (3) "King of Kings": Saul was one king among many; Christ is "King of kings and Lord of lords"—supreme over all. (4) Written Name: Saul's kingship was rejected and forgotten; Christ's title is "written"—permanent, indelible. (5) Not by Appearance: Saul was chosen for height and appearance; Christ's kingship rests on His identity as "the Word of God" (Rev 19:13) and His work of redemption (His "robe dipped in blood"). (6) Divine vs. Human Criteria: The trajectory from Saul to Christ shows the complete inversion: what humans valued in Saul (appearance, stature) is irrelevant; what God values in Christ (obedience, sacrifice, divine nature) is everything. The contrast type reaches its consummation in the eternal reign of the one true King.

Connection Method(s): Contrast, Redemptive-Historical Progression — Christ's eternal, universal reign as "King of kings" consummates the trajectory from Saul's temporary, failed kingship through David's covenant to Christ's everlasting kingdom.

Trajectory Table: 140 - Saul (Rejected King)