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Revelation 19:1-3

Greek Key Terms:

  • G129 αἷμα (haima) — blood; here specifically the blood "of his servants" whose accounting is finally closed in Babylon's judgment
  • G1556 ἐκδικέω (ekdikeō) — to avenge, vindicate, carry out justice; the same verb the martyrs used in their "How long?" petition (Rev 6:10) — now answered in the active voice: "he has avenged (ἐξεδίκησεν) their blood"
  • G2919 κρίνω (krinō) — to judge, decide; "true and righteous are his judgments (κρίσεις), for he has judged (ἔκρινεν) the great harlot" — the forensic answer to the martyrs' forensic petition
  • G239 ἁλληλουϊά (hallēlouïa) — "Hallelujah" (Heb. hallelu-yah, "Praise Yah"); the only four occurrences in the NT are in Rev 19:1-6 — heaven's liturgical response to the answered blood-cry

Context: Revelation 19:1-3 opens the fourth and climactic "heavenly hymn" cycle of the Apocalypse. Structurally, it answers Rev 6:9-11 precisely. In Rev 6:10, the souls of those "slain for the word of God" cry from under the altar: "How long, O Sovereign Lord (δεσπότης), holy and true, until thou judge (κρίνεις) and avenge (ἐκδικεῖς) our blood (αἷμα) on those who dwell on the earth?" They are told to "rest yet for a little season" (6:11). Revelation 19:2 is that "little season" coming to an end. The same four word-groups — Sovereign Lord (δεσπότης is not used here, but the parallel is clear in κύριος ὁ θεὸς ὁ παντοκράτωρ, v. 6), judge (κρίνω), avenge (ἐκδικέω), blood (αἷμα) — reappear, now in the perfect/aorist of accomplishment: "he has judged (ἔκρινεν) the great harlot... and has avenged (ἐξεδίκησεν) the blood of his servants at her hand." The "great harlot" (Babylon, chs. 17-18) is the eschatological embodiment of every persecuting power from Cain onward; her fall in ch. 18 is precisely the closing of the Gen 4:10 / Gen 9:5 / Lev 4:7 / Ezek 3:18 / Rev 6:10 blood-account that has accumulated across the whole canon. The hallēlouia that follows (the first and one of only four in the NT) is not incidental worship but the liturgical answer to blood's long question. Heaven sings because the cry has finally been heard and answered. For the voice-of-blood trajectory, Rev 19:2 is the consummation stage: the moment at which Christ's already-pardoning voice (Heb 12:24) and martyr-vengeance's still-crying voice (Rev 6:10) converge — Christ's blood having spoken pardon for those who trusted, martyr-blood having now spoken judgment that has landed on those who persecuted.

Connections:

  • TO: Genesis 4:10 (the blood-cry that Rev 19:2 finally answers); Genesis 9:5 (the sworn divine commitment to "require" blood — now executed); Psalm 79:10 ("let the avenging of the blood of thy servants... be known among the heathen in our sight"); Deuteronomy 32:43 ("he will avenge (naqam) the blood of his servants" — the precise OT phrase Rev 19:2 quotes); Jeremiah 51:49 (Babylon must fall for the slain of Israel); Revelation 6:10 (the martyrs' "How long?" question)
  • FROM OT: n/a — Rev 19:2 is the eschatological terminus; prior OT texts flow into it
  • FROM NT: Luke 18:7-8 (Jesus' parable of the persistent widow: "Shall not God avenge (ekdikēsis) his own elect, which cry day and night unto him?... he will avenge them speedily"); 2 Thessalonians 1:6-8 (the Lord Jesus revealed "in flaming fire, taking vengeance (ekdikēsis) on them that know not God"); Revelation 18:24 ("in her was found the blood of prophets and of saints, and of all that were slain upon the earth" — the precise accounting Rev 19:2 settles); Revelation 21:4 (no more death, no more tears — the positive counterpart: blood no longer needs a voice)

Christological Connection: Revelation 19:2 is the hermeneutical closing bracket of the entire voice-of-blood trajectory. Genesis 4:10 opened with blood that cried from the ground for vengeance; Genesis 9:5 codified God's sworn commitment to "require" such blood; Leviticus 4 and 16 provided the liturgical anticipation of answer through sprinkled blood; Numbers 35:33 exposed the Mosaic system's limit; Ezekiel widened blood's accusation across covenant community; Hebrews 12:24 announced that in Christ's own blood a better word had now been spoken — pardon for those who trust him. But a problem remained open: what of blood not covered by Christ's pardoning word? What of persecutors who shed the blood of saints and never repented? What of Abel, whose murderer refused the grace God offered (Gen 4:15)? Revelation 19:2 answers: their reckoning will not be suspended. Christ's blood speaks louder than Abel's blood to every sinner who will hear it; for those who refuse, Abel's original cry remains on the docket, joined by every martyr since, and Rev 19:2 is the day it is heard.

Christologically, the passage operates through the "two voices" the parent TT's summary identifies. Christ's blood speaks pardon (Heb 12:24); martyr-blood speaks vengeance (Rev 6:10); both voices are authoritative, and both must be answered. The Lamb himself is the one who executes both answers — Rev 19:11-16 immediately follows the hallelujah-chorus, showing the rider on the white horse "in righteousness doth he judge and make war," his robe "dipped in blood" (v. 13), coming to "tread the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of almighty God" (v. 15). The Lamb who shed his own blood for sinners is the same Lamb who sheds the blood of those who rejected his blood. Rev 19:2 is not a departure from Calvary; it is Calvary's other side — the wrath that fell on Christ for the elect now falling on those who refused to shelter under his blood. Deuteronomy 32:43 and Psalm 79:10 are the textual tradition Rev 19:2 quotes; Luke 18:7-8 is Jesus' own promise that the cry will be answered "speedily" — a "speedily" measured in redemptive-historical time, not human impatience.

The passage vindicates three doctrines simultaneously. First, divine justice: no shed blood is lost; Gen 9:5's "I will require" is eschatologically honored. Second, Christ's sufficiency: the pardoning voice of his blood (Heb 12:24) is not a suspension of justice but its absorption for the elect — and Rev 19:2 shows that the justice which was absorbed for believers is executed for those who refused. Third, martyr comfort: the saints who have "overcome by the blood of the Lamb" (Rev 12:11) and who have cried "How long?" (Rev 6:10) are now vindicated — their blood-cry was real, heard, and honored. The already/not-yet tension the parent TT carefully preserves finds its resolution here: already, Christ's blood has spoken pardon; not-yet, martyr-blood has still been crying; at consummation, both are answered, and Rev 21:4 completes the picture — "no more death" means blood no longer needs to speak because every account is settled, every tear wiped away. The trajectory does not end with all blood silenced but with all blood finally heard and answered.

Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment (primary) — Rev 19:2 is the explicit eschatological fulfillment of multiple OT promises that shed blood will be avenged: Gen 9:5's "I will require," Deut 32:43's "he will avenge the blood of his servants" (quoted almost verbatim — Deut 32:43 MT אֶת־דַּם־עֲבָדָיו יִקּוֹם / Rev 19:2 ἐξεδίκησεν τὸ αἷμα τῶν δούλων αὐτοῦ), Ps 79:10's "let the avenging... be known," and the martyrs' own petition in Rev 6:10. The perfect-tense ἐξεδίκησεν announces the completion of what Gen 4:10 first cried. + Longitudinal Theme — Rev 19:2 is the canonical terminus of the blood-voice motif threaded through Gen 4, Gen 9, Lev 4, Lev 16, Num 35, Ezek 3, Rev 6, Rev 9, and Heb 12:24; without Rev 19:2, the trajectory would lack closure. + Redemptive-Historical Progression — the passage locates the final judgment within the grand arc: creation (imago Dei as basis for blood-reckoning, Gen 9:6) → fall (Abel, Gen 4) → covenant anticipation (Lev 4, 16) → Christ's already-pardoning blood (Heb 12:24) → consummation (Rev 19:2). + Contrast (secondary, in harmony with parent TT) — Rev 19:2 sits alongside Heb 12:24 in a contrast-structure: the same God who pardons believers through Christ's blood avenges unrepentant persecutors through the Lamb's wrath; the "two voices" the trajectory traces are both answered, but in categorically opposite directions. Anti-default check: Typology is not the governing category here. Rev 19:2 does not prefigure anything later (it is the eschatological climax) and does not function typologically in relation to its OT backgrounds. It is the Promise-Fulfillment consummation of the canon-wide blood-accounting, the Longitudinal Theme's terminus, and the already/not-yet resolution. Per Greidanus, when a NT text explicitly cites and fulfills specific OT promises (Deut 32:43; Ps 79:10), Promise-Fulfillment is the primary category.

Trajectory Table: 180 - Voice of Blood (Blood That Speaks)