Reading Revelation Responsibly, with Michael Gorman
Conversing with Mark Labberton
Release Date: 11/04/2025
Conversing with Mark Labberton
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info_outlineWhat is the book of Revelation really about? For ages, it has been the source of sensationalism, idolatry, confusion, and end-times predictions. But at its root, it is about the power and worship of the Lamb who was slain.
Biblical scholar Michael J. Gorman joins Mark Labberton to explore how Christians can read the book of Revelation with wisdom, faith, and hope rather than fear or sensationalism. Drawing from his book Reading Revelation Responsibly: Uncivil Worship and Witness—Following the Lamb into the New Creation, Gorman offers a reorientation to Revelation’s central vision: worshipping the Lamb, resisting idolatrous power, and embodying faithful discipleship in the world. Together they discuss Revelation’s misuses in popular culture, its critique of empire and nationalism, and its invitation to follow the crucified and risen Christ into the new creation.
Episode Highlights
- “The book of Revelation is about lamb power—not hyper-religious or political power. It’s about absorbing rather than inflicting evil.”
- “This book is for those who are confused by, afraid of, and or preoccupied with the book of Revelation.”
- “We shouldn’t look for predictions but for parallels and analogies.”
- “Worship, discipleship, and new creation—that’s where Revelation hangs its hat.”
- “At its root, Christian nationalism is a form of idolatry.”
- “The only way to come out of Babylon is to go back into Babylon with new values and new practices.”
Helpful Links and Resources
- Reading Revelation Responsibly – https://www.amazon.com/Reading-Revelation-Responsibly-Following-Creation/dp/1606085603/
- Reverse Thunder by Eugene Peterson – https://www.amazon.com/Reversed-Thunder-Revelation-Praying-Imagination/dp/0060665033
- St. Mary’s Seminary & University, Baltimore – https://www.stmarys.edu
About Michael J. Gorman
Michael J. Gorman is the Raymond E. Brown Professor of Biblical Studies and Theology at St. Mary’s Seminary & University in Baltimore, Maryland. A leading New Testament scholar, he is the author of numerous books on Pauline theology and Revelation, including Reading Revelation Responsibly, Cruciformity, and Participating in Christ. Gorman’s teaching and writing emphasize Scripture as a call to cruciform discipleship, faithful worship, and the hope of new creation.
Show Notes
- Introducing Reading Revelation Responsibly
- “This book is for those who are confused by, afraid of, and or preoccupied with the Book of Revelation.”
- “Apocalypse” means revelation, not destruction.
- Emerging from twenty-five years of study and teaching, aimed at rescuing Revelation from misinterpretation or neglect
- Growing up amid 1970s end-times obsession—Hal Lindsey’s The Late Great Planet Earth and fearful youth-group predictions of the world’s end
- Fear of the book of Revelation until he studied it with Bruce Metzger at Princeton Seminary
- Why he wrote the book: for people who have been scared or confused by Revelation’s misuse
- Interpretation and misreading the book of Revelation
- Early questions: Does Revelation predict particular events or people?
- No predictions, but symbolic speaking into every age
- “Our task is not to find predictions but to discern parallels and analogies.”
- Warning against mapping Revelation onto modern crises or personalities
- “When those predictions fail, the book gets sidelined or scoffed at.”
- Keep one foot in the first-century context and one in the present
- Worship and discipleship
- The heart of Revelation is worship.
- “This is a book about worship—and about the object of our worship.”
- Explaining the subtitle: Uncivil Worship and Witness—Following the Lamb into the New Creation
- “Uncivil worship” contrasts with “civil religion”—worship that refuses to idolize political power
- Influence from Eugene Peterson’s Reverse Thunder and his own teaching at St. Mary’s, where Peterson once taught Revelation
- Worship leads to discipleship: “Those who follow the Lamb wherever he goes.”
- True discipleship mirrors the Lamb’s humility and non-violence.
- The lamb and the meaning of power
- Interpreting Revelation’s vision of the slain and standing Lamb as the key to understanding divine power
- “The crucified Messiah is the risen Lord—but he remains the crucified one.”
- The Lamb appears twenty-eight times, a symbol of universality and completeness.
- “Revelation is about lamb power—absorbing rather than inflicting evil.”
- Discipleship is cruciform: following the Lamb’s way of self-giving love.
- The unholy trinity and the danger of idolatry
- Chapters 12–13 depict the dragon and two beasts—the “unholy trinity” of satanic, imperial, and religious power.
- “Power gone amok”: political, military, and spiritual domination that mimic divinity
- How true worship resists empire and exposes idolatry
- Warning against reading these beasts as predictions of the UN or the pope; rather, they reveal recurring alliances of religion and politics
- “At its root, Christian nationalism is idolatry.”
- When political identity eclipses discipleship, “political power always wins, and faith loses.”
- Faith, politics, and worship today
- Christian nationalism as a modern form of “civil religion,” conflating patriotism with divine will
- “It’s only Christian in name—it lacks Christian substance.”
- Idolatry is not limited to one side: “It permeates the left, the right, and probably the centre.”
- Labberton agrees: false worship is endemic wherever self-interest and fear shape our loves.
- Both stress that Revelation calls the church to worship the Lamb, not the state.
- “Revelation critiques all human systems of false worship.”
- Revelation’s goal: Not destruction, but new creation
- “Destruction is penultimate—cleansing the way for renewal.”
- Believers already live as citizens of that new creation.
- “The only way to come out of Babylon is to go back into Babylon with new values and new practices.”
- Communal, not merely individual, discipleship: “Revelation is written to churches, not just believers.”
- Reinterpreting Revelation 3:20: Jesus knocking isn’t an altar call to unbelievers but Christ seeking re-entry into his own church.
- “Jesus always wants to come back in.”
- Living revelation today
- Spirituality of hope, not fear or withdrawal
- “Reading Revelation responsibly means engaging the world through worship and witness.”
- How true worship is dangerous because it transforms our allegiance.
- “Following the Lamb into the new creation is the church’s act of resistance.”
- Conclusion: “Worthy is the Lamb.”
Production Credits
Conversing is produced and distributed in partnership with Comment magazine and Fuller Seminary.