Daily Devotional Index

Daily Devotional Index > Chapter 8 > Verse 9

Daily Devotional For June 9, 2025

And the second angel blew his trumpet, and it was that a great mountain, burning with fire, was thrown into the sea, and a third of the sea became blood, and a third of the creatures in the sea (those having souls) died, and a third of the ships were destroyed. Rev 8:8-9.

           The fact that water turns into blood here is a strong reminder of the first plague of the Exodus (Exodus 7:19-21). Turning the Nile into blood would destroy Egypt’s economy and comforts in an instance. The lifeblood of Egypt was and is the water from the Nile.
           If you have ever traveled to Egypt, you know that Egypt is a lush and productive country along the banks of the Nile, but just a few miles away from the river you find some of the driest, most barren land you will see anywhere. It rains so seldom that the soil is as fine as flour, dusty in the extreme. You can hardly find a blade of weed, much less healthy crops there. In fact, the humidity is so low ten miles from the Nile that it all but sucks the moisture right out of you. Every time I have had a chance to visit the Egyptian desert, I have had to drink a couple of liters on my return or face a serious headache!
           There is a second clear allusion in this text, a reminder of God’s judgment on ancient Babylon. I am against you, O destroying mountain, you who destroy the whole earth,’ declares the LORD. ‘I will stretch out my hand against you, roll you off the cliffs, and make you a burned-out mountain.'”Jer 51:25, NIV. In Jeremiah 51 God pronounces judgment on Babylon because she has been oppressing the people of God. So the second trumpet blends elements of the Old Testament judgments on both Egypt and Babylon. What is interesting is that both countries were and are flat, dry and dependant on the great rivers that pass through them.
           But if ancient Babylon was located in a flat river valley, why does this text speak of a mountain? It is a symbolic reference. In Daniel 2 it is God’s kingdom that is described in terms of a great mountain. So Jeremiah’s description suggests Babylon is a great counterfeit of God’s true kingdom. This trumpet promises that God will destroy that counterfeit in the waters of her own “sea.”
           The symbolic judgments represented in the second trumpet may well reflect the collapse of the Roman Empire, an event still future at the time the Book of Revelation was written. From the point of view of the first readers, the Empire may have seemed invincible. But John is assured through this vision that God marks the activities of oppressors on this earth, and He acts at the proper time.

           Lord, give me the confidence that matters are still under Your control. May I not grow impatient at the pace of Your interventions.