Revelation 11 Quiz

25 Comprehensive Revelation 11 Quiz Questions and Answers

Revelation 11 carries the Apocalypse from its second interlude into the sounding of the seventh trumpet, closing the first great cycle of judgment.

Revelation 11 Quiz Questions and Answers

Question 1: What did the voices in heaven declare about the kingdoms of the world when the seventh trumpet sounded?
  • A. They shall be given to the saints
  • B. They are become kingdoms of our Lord
  • C. They shall serve the Lamb for ever
  • D. They are consumed in God’s great wrath
  • E. They shall be ruled by saints above
View Answer

Answer 1: B: The voices declared that the kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord and of his Christ. Distractor A is a trap drawn from Daniel 7:27, where the kingdom is given to the saints of the most High, a passage close in spirit but not what the voices here say.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:15, “The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and ever.”

Question 2: For how many days were the two witnesses to prophesy?
  • A. 1260 days
  • B. 1000 days
  • C. 1290 days
  • D. 2300 days
  • E. 1335 days
View Answer

Answer 2: A: The two witnesses were to prophesy for a thousand two hundred and threescore days, which is 1260. Distractors C, D, and E name prophetic numbers from Daniel that a student of end-times chronology might substitute in error.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:3, “And I will give power unto my two witnesses, and they shall prophesy a thousand two hundred and threescore days.”

Question 3: By what two spiritual names was the great city called?
  • A. Babylon and Tyre
  • B. Moab and Edom
  • C. Nineveh and Babylon
  • D. Sodom and Egypt
  • E. Jezreel and Samaria
View Answer

Answer 3: D: The great city was spiritually called Sodom and Egypt. Every distractor pairs names of biblical cities or regions associated with judgment, but none is the combination the text gives for this city.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:8, “the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt.”

Question 4: What two symbols represented the two witnesses?
  • A. Two great swords and two shields
  • B. Two bright stars and two angels
  • C. Two olive trees and two candlesticks
  • D. Two golden crowns and two trumpets
  • E. Two great pillars and two altars
View Answer

Answer 4: C: The two witnesses are identified as the two olive trees and the two candlesticks standing before the God of the earth. This imagery draws directly on Zechariah 4, where olive trees and a lampstand represent anointed ministry before God.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:4, “These are the two olive trees, and the two candlesticks standing before the God of the earth.”

Question 5: How many men were killed when the great earthquake struck the city?
  • A. Three thousand men
  • B. Ten thousand men
  • C. Twelve thousand men
  • D. Five thousand men
  • E. Seven thousand men
View Answer

Answer 5: E: Seven thousand men were slain in the earthquake. Distractor C (twelve thousand) echoes the number sealed from each tribe in chapter seven. The compound D, A and B) fails because both A (three thousand) and B (ten thousand) are false, and no such pair is named in the text.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:13, “and in the earthquake were slain of men seven thousand.”

Question 6: What power did the two witnesses have over the waters?
  • A. To hold them in check
  • B. To turn them to blood
  • C. To part them in two
  • D. To call them from sea
  • E. To still them with ease
View Answer

Answer 6: B: They had power over waters to turn them to blood. Distractor C (part them in two) echoes Moses at the Red Sea and Elijah at the Jordan, making it a plausible cross-reference trap from elsewhere in the biblical narrative.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:6, “and have power over waters to turn them to blood.”

Question 7: For how many months were the Gentiles to tread the holy city underfoot?
  • A. Forty-two months
  • B. Thirty months
  • C. Sixty months
  • D. Thirty-six months
  • E. Forty-eight months
View Answer

Answer 7: A: The holy city was to be trodden under foot forty and two months. This is the same duration as the witnesses’ 1260 days of prophesying, confirming the parallel structure of the two halves of chapter eleven.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:2, “the holy city shall they tread under foot forty and two months.”

Question 8: What came from the mouths of the two witnesses to devour their enemies?
  • A. Water
  • B. Smoke
  • C. Fire
  • D. Light
  • E. Hail
View Answer

Answer 8: C: Fire proceeded out of their mouth and devoured their enemies. Distractor E (hail) is from chapter eleven itself, appearing in verse nineteen among the phenomena at the temple’s opening, making it a content-close trap from the same chapter.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:5, “fire proceedeth out of their mouth, and devoureth their enemies.”

Question 9: For how long were the bodies of the two witnesses left unburied?
  • A. Forty days and a half
  • B. Seven days and a half
  • C. Ten days and a half
  • D. Three days and a half
  • E. Fourteen days and a half
View Answer

Answer 9: D: The bodies lay unburied for three days and a half. Every distractor uses the same “days and a half” format, requiring the student to know the precise figure rather than recognising the pattern alone.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:9, “And they of the people and kindreds and tongues and nations shall see their dead bodies three days and a half, and shall not suffer their dead bodies to be put in graves.”

Question 10: What entered the two witnesses after three days and a half?
  • A. The glory of God
  • B. The Spirit of life
  • C. The breath of heaven
  • D. The fire of the Lord
  • E. The power of Christ
View Answer

Answer 10: B: The Spirit of life from God entered into them and they stood upon their feet. Distractor A (the glory of God) echoes Ezekiel and the filling of the tabernacle but is not what the verse says entered the witnesses.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:11, “And after three days and a half the Spirit of life from God entered into them, and they stood upon their feet.”

Question 11: What title did the four and twenty elders use when they addressed God?
  • A. Holy Lord God
  • B. God of heaven
  • C. King of kings
  • D. Ancient of Days
  • E. Lord God Almighty
View Answer

Answer 11: E: The elders addressed him as Lord God Almighty. Distractor D (Ancient of Days) is drawn from Daniel 7 and describes the same being in a different prophetic context, making it a plausible cross-book trap.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:17, “We give thee thanks, O Lord God Almighty, which art, and wast, and art to come.”

Question 12: What was John given that was described as being like a rod?
  • A. A reed
  • B. A staff
  • C. A rod
  • D. A wand
  • E. A sceptre
View Answer

Answer 12: A: John was given a reed like unto a rod. Distractor C (a rod) is the primary trap because the text uses “rod” as the comparison, not as the name of the instrument given. A student who reads hastily may recall “rod” and select C.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:1, “And there was given me a reed like unto a rod.”

Question 13: What overcame and killed the two witnesses?
  • A. The armies of the nations
  • B. The angel of the abyss
  • C. The beast of the pit
  • D. The horsemen of darkness
  • E. The serpent of old
View Answer

Answer 13: C: The beast that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit overcame and killed them. Distractor B (the angel of the abyss) is drawn from chapter nine, where Abaddon rules the locust army. The two figures are associated with the same pit but are distinct in the text.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:7, “the beast that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit shall make war against them, and shall overcome them, and kill them.”

Question 14: What happened to the two witnesses when they heard the voice say “Come up hither”?
  • A. Rose into the sky
  • B. Fell down as dead
  • C. Vanished from the earth
  • D. Ascended in a cloud
  • E. Walked through the crowd
View Answer

Answer 14: D: They ascended up to heaven in a cloud. Distractor A (rose into the sky) is close in meaning but omits the cloud, which is the specific detail the verse provides. The cloud echoes Christ’s ascension in Acts 1:9.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:12, “And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and their enemies beheld them.”

Question 15: In the great earthquake, what happened to the tenth part of the city?
  • A. It burned
  • B. It fell
  • C. It shook
  • D. It sank
  • E. It split
View Answer

Answer 15: B: The tenth part of the city fell. Distractor C (it shook) is the sharpest trap, because the city shook in the earthquake, but the text specifically says the tenth part fell, not merely shook. The distinction requires knowing both the cause and the result.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:13, “the tenth part of the city fell.”

Question 16: What was seen in the temple of God when it was opened in heaven?
  • A. The throne of God
  • B. The altar of gold
  • C. The ark of God
  • D. The book of life
  • E. The holy of holies
View Answer

Answer 16: C: The ark of his testament was seen in the temple. Distractor B (the altar of gold) is drawn from chapter nine, verse thirteen, where a voice came from the golden altar. Both are temple furnishings in Revelation, making B a plausible but incorrect answer.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:19, “and there was seen in his temple the ark of his testament.”

Question 17: What was John specifically told not to measure?
  • A. The outer court
  • B. The inner court
  • C. The holy altar
  • D. The lower court
  • E. The holy city
View Answer

Answer 17: A: The court which is without the temple was left out and not measured. Distractor C (the holy altar) is the sharpest trap because John WAS told to measure the altar in the same passage. A student who recalls “altar” from verse one may wrongly conclude it was excluded.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:2, “But the court which is without the temple leave out, and measure it not.”

Question 18: What specific power did the two witnesses have regarding rain?
  • A. To bind the clouds
  • B. To still the winds
  • C. To seal the skies
  • D. To quench the rain
  • E. To close the heavens
View Answer

Answer 18: E: They had power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the days of their prophecy. This echoes Elijah’s prayer in 1 Kings 17, when rain was withheld for three and a half years, the same duration as the witnesses’ ministry.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:6, “These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the days of their prophecy.”

Question 19: What did the four and twenty elders do when the seventh trumpet sounded?
  • A. Bowed down to God
  • B. Fell on their faces
  • C. Cast down their crowns
  • D. Stood before the throne
  • E. Opened wide their mouths
View Answer

Answer 19: B: The four and twenty elders fell upon their faces and worshipped God. Distractor C (cast down their crowns) is drawn from chapter four, where the elders cast their crowns before the throne. Both actions belong to the same twenty-four elders in Revelation, making C a strong cross-chapter trap.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:16, “the four and twenty elders, which sat before God on their seats, fell upon their faces, and worshipped God.”

Question 20: Which woe did the text declare was past after the two witnesses rose?
  • A. The first woe
  • B. The third woe
  • C. The seventh woe
  • D. The second woe
  • E. The final woe
View Answer

Answer 20: D: The second woe is past. Distractor B (the third woe) names what was still to come, as verse fourteen says the third woe cometh quickly. A student who confuses what was past with what was next will pick B.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:14, “The second woe is past; and, behold, the third woe cometh quickly.”

Question 21: Which of the following phenomena occurred when the temple of God was opened in heaven?
  • A. Lightnings and voices
  • B. Thunderings and an earthquake
  • C. A and B
  • D. A river of water
  • E. A pillar of smoke
View Answer

Answer 21: C: Both A and B are verifiably true from verse nineteen. Lightnings and voices occurred, and so did thunderings and an earthquake, along with great hail. D (a river of water) and E (a pillar of smoke) do not appear in the text, making A and B together the only fully accurate compound.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:19, “and there were lightnings, and voices, and thunderings, and an earthquake, and great hail.”

Question 22: What did those who dwell on the earth do when the two witnesses died?
  • A. Rejoiced and sent gifts
  • B. Mourned and made prayer
  • C. Wept and sought shelter
  • D. Knelt and gave thanks
  • E. Fasted and wore sackcloth
View Answer

Answer 22: A: The earth dwellers rejoiced over the witnesses and made merry and sent gifts to one another. The two witnesses had tormented those who dwell on the earth, so their deaths were met with celebration rather than mourning.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:10, “And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoice over them, and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another.”

Question 23: In what were the two witnesses clothed during their ministry?
  • A. Linen
  • B. Sackcloth
  • C. Armour
  • D. Purple
  • E. Ashes
View Answer

Answer 23: B: They prophesied clothed in sackcloth. Sackcloth is the garment of mourning and repentance throughout scripture. Distractor D (purple) is the garment of royalty and of the harlot in chapter seventeen, drawing a deliberate contrast with the witnesses’ self-denying ministry.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:3, “and they shall prophesy a thousand two hundred and threescore days, clothed in sackcloth.”

Question 24: What did the voice from heaven say to the two witnesses?
  • A. Go in peace
  • B. Rise and stand
  • C. Come forth now
  • D. Fear thou not
  • E. Come up hither
View Answer

Answer 24: E: The voice said “Come up hither.” These same words were spoken to John in chapter four, verse one, at the opening of the heavenly throne vision, making D (fear thou not) and C (come forth now) plausible but incorrect substitutions from elsewhere in Revelation.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:12, “And they heard a great voice from heaven saying unto them, Come up hither.”

Question 25: According to the elders’ proclamation, what time had come?
  • A. The time of great peace
  • B. The time of God’s mercy
  • C. The time of Satan’s fall
  • D. The time of the dead
  • E. The time of the harvest
View Answer

Answer 25: D: The time of the dead, that they should be judged, had come. Distractor E (the harvest) echoes Revelation 14:15, where the hour has come to reap, but that is a separate vision and is not what the elders declare here.
KJV Reference: Revelation 11:18, “the time of the dead, that they should be judged.”

Revelation 11 is the chapter of the two witnesses and the seventh trumpet. These men are killed, displayed, and raised before a watching world. Death does not hold those whom God has called to speak. The seventh trumpet is not a threat but a declaration: the kingdoms of this world have already become his. The worshippers fall on their faces because there is nothing else to do.

Explore more Bible quizzes:

  • Revelation 10 quiz: the interlude before this chapter, where John eats the little book and is sent to prophesy again
  • Revelation 9 quiz: for the fifth and sixth trumpets that lead into this chapter’s climax
  • Revelation 1 quiz: to begin the Apocalypse from John’s first vision of the glorified Christ
  • Revelation 1 to 22 quiz: to set this chapter within the full sweep of twenty-two

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