Commentary
This closing scene certifies John's visions as trustworthy, forbids misdirected worship, and leaves the prophecy open before the churches because "the time is near." Jesus' repeated "I am coming soon" binds the passage together, alongside the blessing on those who keep the book's words and the warning not to alter them. The ending holds several notes in deliberate tension: moral separation is sharpened, the washed are promised access to the tree and the city, the thirsty are invited to take the water of life freely, and the whole book closes with prayer for Jesus' coming and with grace.
Revelation 22:6-21 closes the apocalypse by presenting its words as divinely given and not to be sealed or altered, redirecting worship to God alone, and summoning the churches to obedient readiness for Jesus' imminent return, while still extending a free invitation to receive the water of life.
22:6 Then the angel said to me, "These words are reliable and true. The Lord, the God of the spirits of the prophets, has sent his angel to show his servants what must happen soon." 22:7 (Look! I am coming soon! Blessed is the one who keeps the words of the prophecy expressed in this book.) 22:8 I, John, am the one who heard and saw these things, and when I heard and saw them, I threw myself down to worship at the feet of the angel who was showing them to me. 22:9 But he said to me, "Do not do this! I am a fellow servant with you and with your brothers the prophets, and with those who obey the words of this book. Worship God!" 22:10 Then he said to me, "Do not seal up the words of the prophecy contained in this book, because the time is near. 22:11 The evildoer must continue to do evil, and the one who is morally filthy must continue to be filthy. The one who is righteous must continue to act righteously, and the one who is holy must continue to be holy." 22:12 (Look! I am coming soon, and my reward is with me to pay each one according to what he has done! 22:13 I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end!) 22:14 Blessed are those who wash their robes so they can have access to the tree of life and can enter into the city by the gates. 22:15 Outside are the dogs and the sorcerers and the sexually immoral, and the murderers, and the idolaters and everyone who loves and practices falsehood! 22:16 "I, Jesus, have sent my angel to testify to you about these things for the churches. I am the root and the descendant of David, the bright morning star!" 22:17 And the Spirit and the bride say, "Come!" And let the one who hears say: "Come!" And let the one who is thirsty come; let the one who wants it take the water of life free of charge. 22:18 I testify to the one who hears the words of the prophecy contained in this book: If anyone adds to them, God will add to him the plagues described in this book. 22:19 And if anyone takes away from the words of this book of prophecy, God will take away his share in the tree of life and in the holy city that are described in this book. 22:20 The one who testifies to these things says, "Yes, I am coming soon!" Amen! Come, Lord Jesus! 22:21 The grace of the Lord Jesus be with all.
Observation notes
- The unit is framed by repeated imminence language: 'what must happen soon' (v. 6), 'I am coming soon' (vv. 7, 12, 20), and 'the time is near' (v. 10).
- The passage repeatedly foregrounds 'the words' of the prophecy/book (vv. 7, 9, 10, 18, 19), showing that the closing concern is not merely emotional expectancy but faithful reception and preservation of the revelation.
- John identifies himself as the one who 'heard and saw' (v. 8), echoing eyewitness validation and linking the conclusion back to the whole visionary experience.
- The angel’s rebuke in vv. 8-9 repeats the earlier correction in 19:10, which indicates that misdirected worship remains a serious danger even in the presence of genuine revelation.
- The command 'Do not seal up' in v. 10 stands in deliberate contrast to Danielic sealing motifs, signaling that this prophecy is for immediate church use rather than deferred obscurity.
- Verse 11 does not command evil as morally good; it presents a judicially sharpened contrast of settled moral states in light of the nearness of the end.
- Verses 12-13 connect Christ’s coming with recompense and with titles of divine sovereignty, making the judge the same one who guarantees the beginning and the end of history.
- The blessing in v. 14 is linked to access: washing robes leads to the right to the tree of life and entrance through the gates, in direct contrast to v. 15’s exclusion imagery of 'outside.
- Jesus’ self-identification in v. 16 joins Davidic messianism ('root and descendant of David') with cosmic hope ('bright morning star'), fitting the whole book’s christological focus.
- The invitation of v. 17 moves from the Spirit and the bride to the hearer and then to the thirsty, widening participation while keeping the source of life fixed in God’s provision.
- The warning against textual tampering in vv. 18-19 is attached specifically to 'the words of the prophecy contained in this book,' so it directly governs Revelation even if its principle also resonates more broadly.
- The final response, 'Amen! Come, Lord Jesus!' (v. 20), shows that faithful hearing culminates not in speculation but in longing for the Lord’s appearing under grace (v. 21).
Structure
- 22:6-7: The angel certifies the revelation as trustworthy and announces the blessedness of keeping its prophetic words in light of Christ’s soon coming.
- 22:8-9: John’s attempt to worship the angel is rebuked; the proper response to revelation is worship of God, shared in by fellow servants.
- 22:10-11: The prophecy is not to be sealed because the time is near; present moral trajectories are stated in a way that intensifies urgency.
- 22:12-15: Jesus declares His soon coming, His recompense, His sovereign identity, and the distinction between those admitted to the city and those left outside.
- 22:16-17: Jesus identifies Himself messianically for the churches, and the Spirit, the bride, the hearer, and the thirsty are gathered into a final invitation to come and receive life freely.
- 22:18-19: A solemn covenantal warning forbids adding to or subtracting from the words of this prophecy under threat of eschatological judgment and exclusion from its blessings as applicable to the offender’s claim or portioning language in the book’s terms.
Key terms
pistoi kai alethinoi
Strong's: G4103
Gloss: trustworthy and true
The closing exhortations depend on the book’s truthfulness; obedience, warning, and hope would collapse if the prophecy were not fully reliable.
tereo
Strong's: G5083
Gloss: keep, guard, observe
The book is not presented as material for curiosity but as revelation to be obeyed and preserved.
tachu
Strong's: G5035
Gloss: soon, quickly
The term creates ethical and prophetic urgency, pressing readiness rather than date-setting.
sphragizo
Strong's: G4972
Gloss: seal, close up
The prophecy is meant for open circulation and active hearing among the churches, unlike a message reserved for a distant generation.
misthos
Strong's: G3408
Gloss: reward, recompense, payment
The closing unit joins grace and accountability; final outcomes correspond to lived allegiance.
plyno tas stolas
Strong's: G4150, G4749
Gloss: wash the robes
The phrase portrays cleansing that issues in eschatological access, standing over against the defiled excluded outside.
Syntactical features
Beatitude framing
Textual signal: The unit includes a blessing in v. 7 and another in v. 14.
Interpretive effect: These beatitudes mark the proper response to the prophecy: keeping its words and being cleansed for access to life, not merely understanding its symbols.
Imperative prohibition with rationale
Textual signal: 'Do not do this... Worship God!' in v. 9; 'Do not seal up... because the time is near' in v. 10.
Interpretive effect: The prohibitions are not arbitrary; each is grounded in theological reality, which clarifies both correct worship and the public function of the prophecy.
Judicially declarative parallelism
Textual signal: The fourfold pattern in v. 11: evil/filthy contrasted with righteous/holy.
Interpretive effect: The compressed parallel clauses intensify the fixed moral polarity exposed by the nearing consummation rather than offering approval of wickedness.
First-person divine speech shifts
Textual signal: The passage moves among angelic speech, John’s narration, and direct words of Jesus, especially in vv. 12-17 and 20.
Interpretive effect: The layered voices culminate in Christ’s own testimony, giving the conclusion strong revelatory authority and rhetorical force.
Purpose clause for access
Textual signal: In v. 14, washing robes is followed by language of right/access to the tree of life and entrance into the city.
Interpretive effect: The syntax ties cleansing directly to eschatological privilege, making moral and redemptive transformation relevant to final participation.
Textual critical issues
Revelation 22:14 'wash their robes' versus 'do His commandments'
Variants: Some manuscripts read 'wash their robes'; others read 'do his commandments.'
Preferred reading: wash their robes
Interpretive effect: The preferred reading links blessed access to cleansing imagery that coheres with Revelation’s robe symbolism, while the alternate reading would foreground obedience more directly.
Rationale: The reading 'wash their robes' is strongly supported and better explains the rise of the smoother, more familiar moralizing variant 'do his commandments.'
Revelation 22:19 'tree of life' versus 'book of life'
Variants: Some manuscripts read 'tree of life,' while others read 'book of life.'
Preferred reading: tree of life
Interpretive effect: The preferred reading matches the immediate context of vv. 14 and 19 with access to the tree and the city; 'book of life' would shift the imagery toward registration language.
Rationale: 'Tree of life' fits the local context more naturally and likely gave rise to assimilation toward the more familiar 'book of life' elsewhere in Revelation.
Old Testament background
Daniel 12:4, 9
Connection type: allusion
Note: The command not to seal the prophecy because the time is near contrasts with Daniel’s sealing of vision for a later horizon, underscoring Revelation’s immediate church relevance.
Deuteronomy 4:2; 12:32
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The warning against adding to or taking away from the words of the prophecy echoes covenantal prohibitions against tampering with God’s revealed word.
Isaiah 55:1
Connection type: allusion
Note: The invitation to the thirsty to come and receive freely resonates with prophetic calls to receive divine provision without price.
Isaiah 11:1, 10
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Jesus as the root and descendant of David draws on Davidic messianic expectation in which the promised ruler is both source and heir of the royal line.
Numbers 24:17
Connection type: echo
Note: The title 'bright morning star' likely evokes royal-messianic star imagery associated with eschatological rule.
Interpretive options
How should Revelation 22:11 be understood?
- As an ironic command exposing the absurdity and doom of remaining in evil as judgment nears.
- As a judicial declaration that moral trajectories are becoming fixed in light of the imminent consummation.
- As a permission statement indicating moral indifference until the end.
Preferred option: As a judicial declaration that moral trajectories are becoming fixed in light of the imminent consummation.
Rationale: The verse sits between the nearness of the time and the coming recompense of Christ. It functions as a sobering polarization statement, not as moral permission.
Who is primarily addressed by the warning against adding to or taking away from the prophecy?
- Anyone who handles Revelation in any way, including readers, hearers, copyists, and teachers.
- Only formal scribes involved in transmitting the text.
- A broad principle for all Scripture with no special reference to Revelation as a distinct book.
Preferred option: Anyone who handles Revelation in any way, including readers, hearers, copyists, and teachers.
Rationale: The wording is directed to 'anyone who hears' the words of this prophecy, which extends beyond scribes while remaining directly anchored to this specific book.
What is the force of 'I am coming soon' in the conclusion?
- A strictly immediate chronological prediction exhausted in the first century.
- An intentionally urgent eschatological declaration that keeps every generation of the church in readiness without nullifying the real future return.
- A purely spiritual coming through providence or inner experience rather than the bodily return of Christ.
Preferred option: An intentionally urgent eschatological declaration that keeps every generation of the church in readiness without nullifying the real future return.
Rationale: The book consistently points to climactic final judgment and new creation, yet the repeated language of nearness functions pastorally to sustain watchfulness and obedience in the churches.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The conclusion must be read as the capstone to the whole apocalypse; its repeated references to 'this book' and 'these words' prevent isolating the final verses from Revelation’s prior visions and church exhortations.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: The warning about adding or taking away applies directly to the prophecy of this book because that is what is mentioned; broader canonical application should be made carefully and secondarily.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Jesus’ self-identification as coming judge, Alpha and Omega, Davidic root and descendant, and morning star controls the unit’s theology and prevents reducing the ending to generic moral exhortation.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The text binds final destiny to lived moral allegiance and obedience to revelation, so readings that detach eschatology from conduct misread the passage’s closing contrasts.
prophetic
Relevance: high
Note: The unit is prophetic exhortation, not merely epistolary farewell; the command not to seal and the call to keep the prophecy govern how the churches are to receive it.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: Images such as robes, city access, outside, and water of life are symbolic yet referential; they should not be flattened either into mere inward sentiment or into crude literalism.
Theological significance
- The final paragraph treats Revelation as binding divine testimony: its words are "trustworthy and true," to be kept, proclaimed, and not revised.
- Jesus' coming is not a decorative closing motif but the horizon of judgment, reward, and hope; "I am coming soon" gives the unit its urgency.
- John's rebuked attempt to worship the angel shows that even true heavenly mediation may not receive the devotion owed to God.
- The passage joins open invitation with fixed judgment: the thirsty may come freely, yet the false and defiled remain outside the city.
- Jesus' titles in vv. 13 and 16 combine divine prerogative and Davidic messianism, bringing the book's christology to an explicit close.
- The warning against adding to or taking away from the prophecy marks divine speech as something the church receives under judgment, not something it edits to taste.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The ending moves quickly among certification, prohibition, beatitude, invitation, threat, testimony, and prayer. That sequence gives the close its force: the prophecy is affirmed as true, guarded from distortion, and turned toward a spoken response, "Come, Lord Jesus."
Biblical theological: These verses gather several biblical currents at once: Daniel's sealed vision is answered by an unsealed prophecy; Deuteronomic anti-tampering language reappears; Isaiah's invitation to the thirsty sounds again; Eden's tree of life returns at the end. Revelation closes not with abstraction but with Scripture-saturated finality.
Metaphysical: History is presented as moving toward a decisive personal arrival. Christ comes with recompense, moral identities are exposed rather than dissolved, and entrance into the city is not interchangeable with exclusion from it. Reality is therefore ordered by divine judgment and gift, not by endless openness.
Psychological Spiritual: The passage shows how revelation sorts desire. John must learn again that awe must not become false worship; hearers must decide whether to keep the prophecy or resist it; the thirsty are invited to receive life rather than remain in defilement. The closing prayer teaches longing as well as warning.
Divine Perspective: God's stance in the conclusion is both severe and generous. He forbids tampering with His prophecy and excludes what is false, yet He also offers the water of life without price and ends the book with grace from the Lord Jesus.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: God certifies the visions as trustworthy and sends His angel to show His servants what must happen soon.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: Jesus comes with recompense, showing His authority over history's end and over each person's outcome.
Category: character
Note: The same conclusion that threatens judgment also gives the water of life freely, displaying holiness without meanness.
Category: personhood
Note: The Spirit speaks with the bride in a coordinated summons, showing personal divine agency rather than impersonal fate.
Category: greatness_incomprehensibility
Note: Titles such as Alpha and Omega, first and last, and beginning and end place Christ above creaturely limits while He still addresses the churches directly.
- The prophecy is left unsealed for public hearing, yet any alteration of it incurs judgment.
- The water of life is free, yet access to the city is not morally indiscriminate.
- Jesus' coming is said to be soon, yet the church lives in sustained readiness rather than date calculation.
- The cry "Come" faces both directions: toward Christ in prayer and toward the thirsty in invitation.
Enrichment summary
Revelation does not end as a private mystical afterglow but as a public, guarded prophetic word. The command not to seal the book places it before the churches for hearing and obedience, while the anti-tampering warning marks it as covenantally protected speech. The final images keep the close from collapsing into either chronology obsession or vague comfort: robes are washed, some remain outside, the thirsty are summoned, and the Spirit joins the bride in a Christ-centered cry.
Traditions of men check
Reading Revelation mainly as material for speculative timelines and event charts.
Why it conflicts: The closing verses center on keeping the prophecy, worshiping God, refusing corruption of the text, and receiving life, not on constructing a timetable.
Textual pressure point: Verses 7, 9, 17, and 18-19 foreground obedience, worship, invitation, and textual fidelity.
Caution: The correction should not dissolve the passage's real future orientation; Jesus' coming and final judgment remain concrete.
Treating grace as if final judgment has no meaningful connection to lived conduct.
Why it conflicts: Jesus says His recompense is with Him, and the contrast between those admitted and those outside is moral as well as eschatological.
Textual pressure point: Verses 12-15 connect works, cleansing, access, and exclusion.
Caution: The passage should not be recast as salvation by merit; v. 17 still offers the water of life freely.
Allowing reverence for spiritual mediators, experiences, or heavenly beings to blur the line of worship.
Why it conflicts: The angel refuses John's prostration and answers with the blunt command, "Worship God."
Textual pressure point: Verses 8-9.
Caution: The text does not deny angelic service; it denies giving angels the honor reserved for God.
Using the warning about adding or subtracting as either an empty slogan or a weapon for every minor disagreement.
Why it conflicts: The threat is concrete and attached to "the words of the prophecy of this book," so it cannot be dismissed, but neither should it be indiscriminately expanded.
Textual pressure point: Verses 18-19.
Caution: The warning addresses willful corruption or truncation of the prophecy; it should not be invoked carelessly against ordinary limits of translation, copying, or interpretation.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_word_guarding
Why It Matters: The warning against adding to or subtracting from the prophecy echoes Israel's covenantal treatment of divine speech. Revelation is not presented as expandable religious material but as testimony to be received intact.
Western Misread: Reducing vv. 18-19 to a narrow comment about scribal technique, or detaching them from the church's obligation to hear and keep this prophecy.
Interpretive Difference: The warning reaches readers, teachers, and all who handle the book's message. The issue is not only copying accuracy but refusal to distort, mute, or supplement what John has written.
Dynamic: symbolic_access_and_exclusion
Why It Matters: Images such as washed robes, the tree of life, the city gates, and those outside convey final belonging and final exclusion in Revelation's own symbolic register.
Western Misread: Either turning the imagery into mere inward feeling or demanding a flatly literal description that misses its judicial force.
Interpretive Difference: The symbols name real destinies through apocalyptic imagery. They are not less than real because they are figurative.
Idioms and figures
Expression: Do not seal up the words of the prophecy
Category: idiom
Explanation: In contrast to Danielic sealing, the command means this prophecy is to remain open for present hearing rather than stored away for a remote generation.
Interpretive effect: It frames Revelation as an accessible and urgent word for the churches, not as esoteric material meant to stay closed.
Expression: The evildoer must continue to do evil... the holy must continue to be holy
Category: parallelism
Explanation: The lines state hardened moral trajectories under the pressure of the approaching end; they do not approve wickedness.
Interpretive effect: The saying sharpens urgency by showing that the nearing consummation exposes and confirms what people are becoming.
Expression: wash their robes
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The image speaks of cleansing from defilement so that one may share the city's life and the tree of life.
Interpretive effect: Access is linked to cleansing rather than entitlement, while the broader context keeps the image within Revelation's grace-shaped salvation logic.
Expression: Outside are the dogs
Category: metaphor
Explanation: "Dogs" functions as moral exclusion language for the impure and shameless, not as a statement about animals.
Interpretive effect: The phrase preserves the sharpness of final exclusion and resists readings that make the city indiscriminately open.
Expression: The Spirit and the bride say, 'Come'
Category: other
Explanation: The line presents a coordinated summons in which the Spirit and the people of God speak together, followed by the hearer's participation and the thirsty person's invitation.
Interpretive effect: It portrays the Spirit's present ministry as ecclesial and Christ-directed, not independent of the given prophecy.
Application implications
- Churches should hear Revelation's ending as a summons to keep the book's words, not merely to decode its images.
- Teachers must resist both embellishing the prophecy and softening its hard edges; verses 18-19 forbid both kinds of distortion.
- Readiness for Christ's coming should show up in worship, speech, and conduct, since He comes with recompense.
- Spiritual experiences and mediating servants must never become objects of reverence; the proper response remains, "Worship God."
- The invitation of verse 17 should still be spoken plainly: the thirsty may come and receive the water of life without price.
- Christian hope should include the church's direct prayer, "Come, Lord Jesus," held together with the grace of verse 21.
Enrichment applications
- Churches should keep Revelation in public hearing and discipleship rather than leaving it to end-times hobbyists.
- The prayer "Come, Lord Jesus" should shape Christian hope without collapsing into prediction fever.
- Teachers should fear selective omission as much as sensational addition; muting Revelation's warnings can also violate its closing charge.
- Corporate witness should sound like verse 17: the church, with the Spirit, invites the thirsty to come and receive life freely under the authority of the given word.
Warnings
- Do not turn "I am coming soon" into a date-setting formula; in this context it creates urgency and fidelity.
- Do not read 22:11 as divine approval of evil; it describes hardened moral trajectories under approaching judgment.
- Do not detach vv. 18-19 from Revelation itself, even if the principle of reverence for God's word has wider resonance.
- Do not reduce the inside/outside contrast to present social inclusion categories; here it marks final eschatological distinction.
- Do not narrow the anti-tampering warning to manuscript copying alone; the passage addresses any corrupt handling of the prophecy's words and force.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not build a full doctrine of charismatic revelation from v. 17; the verse chiefly shows the Spirit joining the bride in a Christ-directed summons.
- Do not neutralize vv. 18-19 by treating the threat as merely rhetorical; the passage intends the warning to function with real ethical seriousness, even where theological systems differ on its implications.
- Do not recast the language of those "outside" as only a present social metaphor; in this scene it refers to final exclusion from the holy city.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating "I am coming soon" either as a failed short-range prediction or as fuel for timetable speculation.
Why It Happens: Readers often force apocalyptic nearness language into either rigid chronology or skeptical dismissal.
Correction: In this closing context the phrase creates real urgency and watchfulness while still pointing to Christ's future return and final judgment.
Misreading: Restricting vv. 18-19 to copyists alone, or applying them so broadly that every minor mistake becomes deliberate tampering.
Why It Happens: The severity of the warning encourages either over-narrowing or overextension.
Correction: The immediate target is willful addition, subtraction, or distortion of this prophecy by those who hear or handle it, not every ordinary limit of transmission or interpretation.
Misreading: Turning the blessing of v. 14 and the recompense language of vv. 12-15 into salvation by moral achievement.
Why It Happens: The passage tightly joins cleansing, conduct, and final access.
Correction: Verse 17 still offers life freely. Revelation's imagery presents works and washed robes as manifestations of allegiance and cleansing, not autonomous human earning.
Misreading: Using "the Spirit and the bride say, Come" to authorize unbounded new revelation.
Why It Happens: Because the Spirit is portrayed as speaking, some readers detach the verse from the surrounding warnings.
Correction: Here the Spirit's speech is aligned with the bride, centered on Christ and life, and bounded by a prophecy that must neither be supplemented nor reduced.