The Dragon of Revelation 13 is the Roman Empire.

Overview

Revelation has three beasts that each have seven heads and ten horns: the Dragon, the Sea Beast, and the Scarlet Beast.

Daniel uses four animals, symbolizing four empires, to describe history from the time of ancient Babylon to Christ’s return. Revelation’s seven-headed beasts are part of and elaborations of the series of animals in Daniel 7. For example:

Both Daniel’s animals and Revelation’s seven-headed beasts exist from before Christ to His return. In other words, they exist at the same time.

Like the seven-headed Beasts, the animals in Daniel 7 have seven heads and ten horns.

The four animals of Daniel 7 are explicitly mentioned in the description of the Sea Beast.

Therefore, the seven-headed Beasts explain Daniel 7 in more detail. This article identifies Revelation’s Dragon:

Revelation 12 uses the title “dragon” as a general name for Satan’s forces in a series of wars involving different entities, beginning before Christ and continuing until the End Time. 

Rev 13 repeats some of these wars but distinguishes between the Dragon, the Sea Beast, the False Prophet, and the Image of the Beast. In this context, when the Dragon is mentioned with the Beast, the Dragon is specifically equivalent to Daniel’s terrible fourth animal. For example:

13:2 mentions it with the other three animals of Daniel 7.

Daniel 7 does not name the fourth animal but describes it as like a dragon.

Therefore, since a previous article identified Daniel’s fourth animal as the Roman Empire, the Dragon is the Roman Empire, but only when mentioned together with the Beast.


Seven-Headed Beasts

Revelation has three beasts that each have seven heads and ten horns.

They are the Dragon, the Sea Beast, and the Scarlet Beast. Given their strange appearances, they are not literal beasts. Since they all have seven heads and ten horns, they must be related. But since they are different beasts, they represent different things. Show More

These seven-headed beasts are part of the series of animals and horns in Daniel 7

For the following reasons, Revelation’s three seven-headed beasts, including the Dragon, are part of the series of animals and horns in Daniel 7:

(1) As a general principle, later prophecies elaborate on earlier ones. Show More

(2) Each of Revelation’s seven-headed beasts has the same number of heads and horns as the animals in Daniel 7. Show More

(3) Daniel’s animals and Revelation’s seven-headed beasts exist at the same time because both groups exist from before Christ’s birth until His Return:

In Daniel, the four animals in chapter 7 represent the ancient Babylonian, Medo-Persian, Grecian, and Roman Empires (see here). The 11th horn, which grows out of the Roman Empire, continues to exist until Christ returns (Dan 7:26, 27).

In Revelation, while the Dragon is first described before Christ’s birth (Rev 12:3, 5), the Sea Beast is finally destroyed when Christ returns (Rev 19:11, 19, 20).

(4) Revelation’s Sea Beast receives its appearance and power from the animals in Daniel 7.:

It looks like a leopard, a bear, and a lion (Rev 13:2), which are the first three animals in Daniel 7.

It receives its power, authority, and throne from a ‘dragon’ (Rev 13:2), which is a good name for Daniel’s fourth animal, described as “dreadful and terrifying and extremely strong … It devoured and crushed and trampled down the remainder with its feet” (Dan 7:7). 

These are perhaps the strongest allusions to the Old Testament anywhere in the Book of Revelation. It is not a coincidence but implies that the seven-headed Beasts are related to Daniel’s animals, are part of the series of kingdoms in Daniel 7, are the same type of thing as Daniel’s animals, namely kingdoms and nations (cf. Rev 17:9-12), and explain the animals, heads, and horns in Daniel 7 in more detail.


The Dragon

This article identifies the Dragon.

Revelation mentions the Dragon, the Beast, and the False Prophet together several times. For example:

(a) The Dragon gave the Beast its great authority (Rev 13:2), and the False Prophet (the Land Beast) exercises all the authority of the Beast in his presence (Rev 13:12).

(b) Demon spirits come out of the mouths of the Dragon, the Beast, and the False Prophet (Rev 16:13, 14).

The purpose of this article is to determine what the Dragon is, particularly when mentioned with the Beast:

Revelation 12

(A) Before Christ, it symbolized all the kingdoms that opposed God’s Old Testament people

When Revelation first describes the Dragon, it stands before the woman who is about to give birth to Christ, ready to devour her Child (that is, Jesus) as soon as He is born (Rev 12:3-4). Here, the woman symbolizes God’s people before Christ’s birth. Her pregnancy symbolizes the promise of the Savior made in the Garden of Eden. These verses describe the confrontation between Satan and God’s people ever since that promise was made. The Dragon is later described as Satan (Rev 12:9), but since the Dragon here has 7 heads and 10 horns, symbolizing the kingdoms of the world (Rev 17:9, 10, 12), it represents all the kingdoms that opposed God’s Old Testament people.

(B) When it confronts Jesus, it could represent the Roman Empire

Once her Child is born, the Dragon attacks the Child, but the Child is “caught up to God and to His throne” (Rev 12:3, 4, 5). Since it attacks Christ, the Dragon here probably represents the Roman Empire, including Judea.

(C) In the war in heaven, it is Satan

After the Child has been caught up, war breaks out in heaven between the Dragon and Michael and their angels (Rev 12:7). In that context, ‘the ‘Dragon’ is explicitly identified as Satan (Rev 12:9).

(D) During the time, times, and a half, the Dragon is equivalent to the Sea Beast

After the Dragon has been defeated in heaven and thrown down to earth, it again attacks the woman (Rev 12:13-14). She now represents God’s New Testament people. She hides in the wilderness for a “time and times and half a time” (Rev 12:14). Since this is the same as the 42 months during which the Sea Beast has authority (Rev 13:5 – see here), the Dragon is now an alternative symbol for the Sea Beast.

(E) In the end-time war, the Dragon is the Image of the Beast.

After the Earth helped the woman (Rev 12:16), the Dragon “went off to make war with the rest of her children” (Rev 12:17). This refers to the end-time war against God’s people as described in the last half of Rev 13, where the Dragon is not directly involved. The Image of the Beast is the primary aggressor and oppressor. So, here, the Dragon seems equivalent to the Image.

Revelation 13

In 13:1-2, the Dragon is the same as Daniel’s terrible fourth animal

The first time the Dragon and the Beast are mentioned together is in Rev 13:1-2, where the Beast emerges from the Sea. There are several indications that the Dragon here is equivalent to Daniel’s fourth animal:

(a) As discussed above, the Dragon is part of the series of kingdoms in Daniel 7.

(b) In the description of the Sea Beast, the Dragon is listed with the Lion, Bear, and Leopard (Rev 13:2), which are the first three of the four animals in Daniel 7 (Dan 7:3, 5, 6), implying that the Dragon is the fourth.

(c) Daniel 7 does not say what kind of animal the fourth is but describes it as like a dragon. It is “dreadful and terrifying and extremely strong, and it had large iron teeth. It devoured and crushed and trampled down the remainder with its feet” (Dan 7:7).

(d) Both the 11th horn of Daniel 7 and Revelation’s Beast are described as the Antichrist, God’s main enemy on earth, cursing God and persecuting His people (Dan 7:25; Rev 13:6-8). Furthermore, both reign for a “time, times, and a half” and both will only be destroyed when Christ returns (Dan 7:26-27; Rev 19:20). Therefore, Revelation’s Beast is the 11th horn. (See here for a detailed discussion.) Since Daniel’s 4th animal gives existence to the 11th horn and Revelation’s Dragon give power to the Beast (13:2), Daniel’s 4th animal and the Dragon must also describe the same entity.

The Roman Empire

Daniel’s fourth animal is the Roman Empire.

As stated, Daniel 7 uses a series of four animals, symbolizing four successive empires, to describe world history from the Babylonian Empire until Christ’s return. It does not identify the animals, but Daniel 8 uses two animals as symbols for empires and explicitly identifies them as Medo-Persia and Greece. A comparison of the descriptions of the animals in Daniel 7 and 8 (see here) identifies the four empires in Daniel 7 as follows:

      • Lion (Dan 7:4) = Babylon
      • Bear (Dan 7:5) = Medo-Persia
      • Leopard with four heads = Greek Empire
      • Dragonlike Beast = Roman Empire

Therefore, the horns of Daniel’s 4th animal symbolize the fragments into which the Roman Empire divided. Show More


Conclusion

When mentioned with the Beast, the Dragon is the Roman Empire. The Beast, which received its authority from the Dragon, is that organization that continued the authority of the Roman Empire after it fragmented into various nations.


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  • For general theological discussions, I recommend Graham Maxwell, who you will find on the Pineknoll website.

The Beast’s fatal wound is its sixth head. (Rev 13:3-4)

Overview

John saw a beast with ten horns and seven heads coming out of the sea. The Beast received its authority from a dragon:

The Dragon symbolizes the Roman Empire.

The Beast symbolizes one of the kingdoms into which the Empire fragmented in the fifth to eighth centuries. Specifically, the Beast symbolizes the Church of the Roman Empire that survived intact after the Empire fragmented, grew in strength, and eventually dominated the other kingdoms in Europe.

One of his seven heads of the Beast had a ‘fatal wound’, meaning that it was dead. But the Beast came to life again.

Since the seven heads exist one after the other, the seven heads symbolize the seven phases of the Beast’s existence. So, the death of one of its heads is the death of the whole Beast but only for a time.

Revelation 17 also explains the fatal wound and the Beast’s recovery from it:

It describes the fatal wound as the Beast being incapacitated; unable to persecute God’s people.

In perhaps the best proof that Rev 13 and 17 describe the same Wound and the same Healing of the Wound, both chapters say that, after the Wound was healed, “everyone whose name has not been written from the foundation of the world in the book of life” was amazed and followed after the Beast (Rev 13:3; 17:8).

Revelation 17 identifies the Wound as the Beast’s sixth head, which is our current age of religious freedom in the West. But Revelation predicts that the Church of the Roman Empire will be revived and again persecute God’s people.

Purpose 

John saw a Beast with “ten horns and seven heads” coming out of the sea (Rev 13:1). One of his seven heads was “as if it had been slain,” for it had a “fatal wound” (Rev 13:3). In other words, it seems as if the Beast itself and the other six heads were still alive. The purpose of this article is to explain what this fatal wound is and which of the seven heads was dead.

Revelation 13:3-4

The Beast continues the Roman Empire.

The Beast received its authority from the Dragon (Rev 13:2). Previous articles identified the Dragon and the Beast:

Revelation 12 uses ‘Dragon’ as a symbol for Satan’s forces in different forms and ages. However, in Revelation 13:2, the Dragon is the same as the fourth animal in Daniel 7, which another article identified as the Roman Empire. 

The Sea Beast is the 11th horn of that fourth animal, symbolizing a world power that, came into existence when the Roman Empire fragmented into many kingdoms, inherited the authority of the Roman Empire (cf. Rev 13:2), and grew in power to dominate the other kingdoms in the territory previously ruled by the Roman Empire (Dan 7:20).

The Beast was dead.

A “fatal wound” is a wound that kills. In other words, the Beast was dead. Therefore, when the wound is healed, it is said that the Beast “has come to life” (Rev 13:12, 14). That same expression is also used for Christ’s resurrection (Rev 2:8) and the resurrection of God’s people when Christ returns (Rev 20:4).

Only one phase of the Beast was dead.

But the entire Beast did not die; only “one of his heads” was “slain” with this fatal wound (Rev 13:3). Since the seven heads exist one after the other (Rev 17:9-10), the seven heads symbolize the seven phases of the Beast’s existence. So, the death of one of its heads is the death of the whole Beast but only for a time.

The whole world worshiped the Beast.

After the wound was healed, “the whole earth … worshiped the beast” (Rev 13:3-4). Show More

They also “worshiped the dragon because he gave his authority to the beast” (Rev 13:4). Since the Dragon symbolizes the Roman Empire, and since the Sea Beast came into existence when the Roman Empire fragmented, the Roman Empire no longer existed when the Beast received its fatal wound. But, by worshiping (showing respect to) the Sea Beast, the people indirectly ‘worship’ the Roman Empire because the Beast is the continuation of the authority of the Dragon (Rev 13:2).

Revelation 17

The Scarlet Beast on which the harlot sits, as described in Revelation 17, provides a different perspective of the same Beast-power. Revelation 17 describes and explains that same Fatal Wound as well as the healing of that wound. It also explains what the Fatal Wound is and which of the seven heads was dead.

At present, the Beast is incapacitated.

Revelation 17 explains the Beast and its heads by referring to the past, the present, and the future. At the ‘present’ time, the chapter describes the Scarlet Beast as incapacitated:

Is not – The Beast “is not” (Rev 17:8). In other words, in some sense, at this time, the Beast does not exist.

Wilderness – In Revelation 12, the pure woman was in the wilderness (Rev 12:6, 14), symbolizing circumstances in which it is difficult to survive. But, in Revelation 17, it is the Beast’s turn to be in the “wilderness” (Rev 17:3).

Abyss – The Beast is in the “abyss” (Rev 17:8), which symbolizes incapacity (Rev 20:3).

Diadems – In contrast to the Dragon and the Sea Beast, the Scarlet Beast has no diadems (ruler crowns) (Rev 12:3; 13:1; 17:3), implying that it does not rule.

So, in Revelation 17, the Beast is suffering, weakened, and unable to rule. In that sense, it “is not.”

This is the Fatal Wound.

For the following reasons, the incapacity in Rev 17 is the same as the fatal wound in Rev 13:

Firstly, for the Beast to be incapacitated must be unusual. Since two different chapters of Revelation describe this condition, they likely describe the same weak period.

Secondly, both the fatal wound in Rev 13 and the abyss in Rev 17 symbolize the inability to persecute God’s people:

When the Sea Beast is alive, it blasphemes God and persecutes God’s people (Rev 13:5-7; cf. Dan 7:25). Therefore, for it to be dead (to have a fatal wound) means being unable to persecute.

To be in the abyss also means to be unable to persecute. For example:

            • Satan is bound in the abyss “so that he would not deceive the nations any longer” (Rev 20:3).
            • After the Beast comes up from the abyss, it immediately proceeds to persecute God’s witnesses (Rev 11:7, 3).

The same Healing of the Wound

Further evidence that Rev 17 describes the same fatal wound as 13:3 is that it describes the same healing of the wound as in Rev 13. Rev 17 predicts that the Beast will come up out of the abyss (Rev 17:8). The following confirms that its escape from the abyss is the healing of the wound in Rev 13:

After the Sea Beast’s “fatal wound was healed … the whole earth was amazed and followed after the Beast” (Rev 13:3).

Similarly, after the Scarlet Beast has “come up out of the abyss … those who dwell on the earth … will wonder when they see the Beast” (Rev 17:8).

Note the similarities:

      1. Both sections refer to the whole world.
      2. The terms “amazed” and “wonder” are translated from the same Greek word thaumazó.
      3. In both chapters, the Beast is exalted after its recovery.
      4. And, perhaps most strikingly, in both, those who adore the Beast are described in both chapters as “everyone whose name has not been written from the foundation of the world in the book of life” (Rev 13:8; 17:8).

For these reasons, the two chapters describe the same period of incapacity, symbolized in Revelation 13 by the Beast’s fatal wound and in Revelation 17 by the Beast being in the abyss or wilderness or ‘is not’.

The Sixth Head

The Fatal Wound is the Sixth Head.

Revelation 17 explains the Beast and its heads by referring to the past, the present, and the future:

The Beast (Rev 17:8) Heads (Rev 17:10)
Past Was Five have fallen.”
Present Is not and is in the abyss “One is.” This would be the sixth head.
Future Will “come up out of the abyss.” The whole world will “wonder when they see the beast.” “The other” (the seventh) “has not yet come.”

Therefore:

The sixth head is the phase when the Beast is in the abyss, which is the head with the fatal wound.

The seventh head follows after the fatal wound has been healed, and the entire world follows after the Beast (Rev 13:4).

It is implied that the entire sixth head is dead. The sixth head or phase begins when the Beast-power is killed and ends when “his fatal wound was healed” (Rev 13:3, 12). This is confirmed by the fact that we never read that the head with the mortal wound comes to life; it is always the Beast that becomes alive (Rev 13:14).

When in history is the Sixth Head?

The fatal wound implies that the Beast goes through three phases; alive, dead, and again alive.

Since a previous article identified the Beast as the 11th horn of Daniel 7, the Beast began to exist when the Roman Empire fragmented into many kingdoms. Specifically, one of the previous articles identified the 11th horn as the Church of the Roman Empire that survived intact after the Empire fragmented, grew in power, and became the Church of the High Middle Ages. Show More

Consequently, another article identifies the seven heads of the Beast as follows:

      1. Babylonian Empire,
      2. Medo-Persian Empire,
      3. Greece,
      4. Roman Empire,
      5. The Roman Church after the Roman Empire fragmented, particularly during the High Middle Ages,
      6. The Roman Church unable to dominate in the present age due to religious freedom and the separation of Church and State, and
      7. The Roman Church revived when the image of the Beast is erected, possibly near in our future.

The Present Time is not John’s Time.

Many commentators assume that the ‘present time’ in Revelation 17 must refer to John’s own time because he had to understand what he was told. But that would mean that the Beast was dead in John’s time, which most certainly was not the case. At that time, the authorities were very able to persecute Christians.

My view is that, when the angel “carried” John “into a wilderness” (Rev 17:3), he took John not to a specific place but to a specific time in history. And since he carried John away, he carried John to a different time.

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