
Blessed are those who do His commandments, that they may have the right to the tree of life, and may enter through the gates into the city. But outside are dogs and sorcerers and sexually immoral and murderers and idolaters, and whoever loves and practices a lie. (Revelation 22:14-15)
Dogs Excluded
The imagery of scripture can be hard to understand without a proper understanding of the cultural norms of the first century. As John completes the revelation of Jesus Christ to the persecuted saints, he draws attention to the glories of eternal life and to those who will be excluded from it. For those who do the commandments of the Lord, they will have the right to the tree of life and will be permitted to enter the heavenly Jerusalem where God dwells. Dogs, sorcerers, sexually immoral, murderers, idolaters, and all liars will not be allowed into the heavenly city. John invokes an image of the cultural view of how dogs prowled about “Eastern cities, without a home and without an owner, feeding on the refuse and filth of the streets, quarreling among themselves, and attacking the passer-by” (Vincent Word Studies).
Under the Law of Moses, dogs were considered unclean and used to denounce the corrupt moral hearts of heathen worship. What John was pointing out among the list of sinful practices that will damn a soul to eternal perdition is how those of an immoral character or morally impure will be punished with eternal destruction. Not everyone goes to Heaven. Jesus said that few will be granted entrance into the eternal kingdom. The immoral will not be saved. Like the dog, the sinful soul will be banned from the eternal city to dwell in darkness and fire, and brimstone. To call someone a dog was the utmost declaration of moral decadence. The Jews considered Samaritans “dogs,” and it is in part why Jesus used the Samaritans to illustrate the grace of God in the story of the benevolent Samaritan.
Dogs will be excluded from heaven because God will not allow anything that defiles to enter into His holy city. Literal dogs will not be in eternity because they are not eternal creatures. Still, John’s language is powerful in showing the degradation of those who refuse to obey the Lord’s commandments. Human wisdom holds that everyone “rests in peace” after death. Jesus said most people who die will find themselves as the dogs kept outside the city. They will not be allowed into eternal life because they lived according to the lusts of their minds and refused to honor God, obey His commandments, and follow the word of Christ.
The Holy Spirit explains the difference between those in the world and those in the body of Christ. For those in the body of Christ, they “do His commandments.” They submit their lives to the grace of God and follow His word in obedience. The world marches to a different drummer. It is clear that the lusts of the flesh fill the desires of the minds of the world. Sexual immorality pervades the minds of people in one form or another. Murderers do not always kill with a knife, but often with the tongue. Idolaters abound as the heart worships the things of this world, like wealth, power, prestige, and human glory. Lying is part of the business world or part of the fabric of life. It is not uncommon to lie about anything.
God judges all men. That judgment will be whether one is allowed in the holy city or kept out like the mongrels of the Orient. It matters how one lives in this life. To live like a dog (without Christ) will die like a dog (without Christ), according to the word of the Lord. There is a great day coming. Salvation will only come to those who do the commandments of the Lord.








