The Woman and the Dragon
Revelation 12 begins with “a woman clothed with the sun” who is expecting a child (Rev 12:1-2). The next verses describe “a great red dragon.” Its “tail swept away a third of the stars of heaven and threw them to the earth” (Rev 12:3-4).
The Dragon’s Tail
The Dragon’s tail can be interpreted in terms of Isaiah 9:14-15, which says:
“The head is the elder and honorable man,
And the prophet who teaches falsehood is the tail.“
Applied to the Dragon, the dragon’s tail deception. Since Satan deceives both in heaven and on earth through his representatives, the question is: Do the stars symbolize deceived people or angels?
Stars could be angels.
Revelation 12 also describes a war in heaven between the dragon’s angels and Michael’s angels, at the end of which the dragon and his angels were thrown down (Rev 12:9). In this context, the great red dragon is identified as Satan (Rev 12:9). Therefore, the “stars” in 12:4 could be Satan’s angels. Has a third of God’s beautiful angels been deceived by Satan?
The Book of Job also describes angels as stars (Job 38:1-7). Job wrote that the morning stars sang together when the LORD laid the foundation of the earth (Job 38:1-7). Since this refers to the creation of our world, these “morning stars” are supernatural beings.
Stars could be people.
However, in some other instances, stars symbolize people. For example:
Daniel wrote that the evil horn would cause “some of the stars to fall to the earth, and it trampled them down” (Dan 8:10). Since the horn is an earthly organization, these stars must be people, specifically God’s people.
In Revelation 1, Jesus has seven stars in His right hand, which are explained as the angels of the seven churches (Rev 1:20, 13, 16). But I assume that these “angels” really are the leaders of those churches and, therefore, they are people.
This woman in Revelation 12 has a crown of 12 “stars” (Rev 12:1). She represents God’s people of all ages. Since the number 12 is derived from the 12 tribes of Israel and Jesus’ 12 disciples, the stars in her crown symbolize some aspect of God’s people. [Show More]
The Immediate Context
I propose that the stars in 12:4 must be interpreted within its immediate context, which describes the war between the woman and the dragon:
Since the woman symbolizes God’s people, specifically, in this context, God’s Old Testament people, the stars that the dragon throws down to earth could be God’s people who have been deceived.
Although the dragon is identified as Satan in the context of the war in heaven (Rev 12:9), in verse 4, it has “seven heads and ten horns” (Rev 12:3), symbolizing the organizations on earth through which Satan persecutes God’s people (Rev 17:9, 12). This may also imply that the stars in 12:4 are people.
Of heaven
The stars are described as “of heaven” (Rev 12:4). However, that does not mean that the “stars” are literally in heaven because Revelation consistently describes God’s people on earth as if they are in heaven. [Show More]
Since “those who dwell on the earth” (11:10; 13:8; 13:12, 14; etc.) always describe God’s enemies, throwing the stars down from heaven to earth may symbolize that these people have now become God’s enemies.
Conclusion
In the immediate context, the stars symbolize God’s people. That the dragon swept away a third of the stars of heaven and threw them to the earth then means that Satan has deceived a large number of God’s Old Testament people.
Articles on Revelation 12
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- The woman, the dragon, the child, and the war in heaven
- What are the stars of heaven in Revelation 12:4 – angels or people?
- WHEN did the war in heaven begin and WHEN did it end?
- HOW did Christ’s death win the victory in the war in heaven?
- They overcame Satan by the word of their testimony. (Rev 12:11)
- Why did God not make an end to evil after the Cross?