The Second Vision
THE SEVEN SEALS, CHAPS. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. 1.
Introduction to the vision, chaps. iv. v.
The real difficulties of apocalyptic exposition now begin.
We seem to pass into a different region, where all is visionary and symbolical.
The prophet is summoned by the trumpet-voice, which had previously spoken to
him, to ascend into heaven, there to be shown ‘the things which must take
place hereafter’ [after these] (chap. iv. 1).
There is a manifest reference in these words to the
direction given to the Seer in chap. i. 19, ‘Write the things which thou sawest
and what they signify, and the things which are about to happen after
these.’ It is these last which the prophet is now to have revealed to him;
the phrase, ‘the things which must happen after these’ [a dei genesqai], being evidently
synonymous with ‘the things which are about to happen’ [a mellei genesqai], the latter expression
clearly indicating that the time of their fulfilment is close at hand.
We must pass by the magnificent description of the heavenly
majesty, in which we are reminded of the sublime visions of Isaiah and Ezekiel,
and come to the scene in which the prophet beholds, ‘in the right hand of him
that sat on the throne, a book, or roll, written within and without, and sealed
with seven seals.’ A strong angel proclaims with a loud voice, ‘Who is worthy
to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof?’ When none is found equal to
the task, and the Seer is overwhelmed with grief because the mystic roll must
remain unopened, he is comforted by the announcement made to him by one of the
elders, that ‘the Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, hath prevailed
to open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof.’ Accordingly, amid the
adoring worship of the heavenly host, and of the whole created universe, the
Lion-Lamb advances to the throne, takes the book from the right hand of Him
that sat thereon, and proceeds to break in succession the seals by which it is
fastened.
Nothing can be more vivid and dramatic than the scenes which
are successively exhibited as the Lamb opens the seals. The four cherubs that
guard the throne, one after another announce the breaking of the first four
seals, with a loud cry of ‘Come!’ And as each is opened the Seer beholds a
visionary figure pass across the field of view, emblematic of the contents of
that portion of the scroll which is unrolled. It will be observed that there is
a manifest gradation in the character of these emblematic representations,
which rise in intensity and terror from the first to the last.
What, then, do these symbols represent? It needs only a
glance to see their general nature and character. Everywhere it is WAR, and the
concomitants of war,---blood, famine, and death, all leading up to and
terminating in one dread and final catastrophe, in which the elements of nature
seem to be dissolved in universal ruin --- ‘the great day of wrath’
(chap. vi.).
Of what events does the prophet speak? Some would have us
believe that this is a compendium of universal history; that we have here the
conquests of Imperial Rome for three hundred years, down to the establishment
of Christianity as the religion of the Empire by Constantine. We are sent to
the volumes of Gibbon to wander through the ages in search of events to
correspond with these symbols. But this is just what the seven churches of Asia
had no power to do. Would it not have been a mockery to invite them to study
and comprehend such visions, which even with the aid of Gibbon are not luminous
to us? Surely, the interpreters who propound such solutions must have closed
their eyes against the express teachings of the book itself. We are precluded
by the terms of the prophecy fromall such vague excursions into general
history; we are shut up to the near, the imminent, the immediate;
to things which must shortly come to pass; to events which intensely
concern the original readers of the Apocalypse: ‘for the time is at hand.’
With this light in our hand all becomes clear. We have only to place ourselves
in the time and circumstances of those primitive churches, and these visionary
symbols shape themselves into historical facts before our eyes. The Seer stands
on the verge of the long-predicted, long-expected crisis, for the coming of
which in their own day the Saviour had before His departure prepared His disciples.
As the prophecy which He delivered on the Mount of Olives commences with wars
and rumours of wars, and goes on the speak of ‘Jerusalem compassed about with
armies,’ and ‘the abomination of desolation standing in the holy place,’ till
it culminates in the seeming wreck of universal nature, and ‘the coming of the
Son of man in the clouds of heaven,’ so the prophecy in the Apocalypse proceeds
in the same method.
Here, then, the vision is representative of the approaching
destruction of Jerusalem and judgment of the guilty land. It is ‘the last
time;’ and the beloved disciple, who hear the prophecy on the Mount, now sees
its fulfilment in vision. His heart is filled with one thought, his eye with
one scene. The storm of vengeance is gathering over his own land; his own
nation --- the city and temple of God. The armies are mustering for the
conflict; and, as seal after seal is broken, he beholds the successive waves of
that tremendous deluge of wrath which was about to overwhelm the devoted land
of Israel. This we believe to be the significance of the symbolic vision of the
seven seals. It is only another form of the selfsame catastrophe foretold by
our Saviour to His disciples; but now the hour is come; the close of the aeon
is at hand, and the ministers of the divine wrath are let loose upon the guilty
nation.
OPENING OF THE FIRST SEAL.
Chap. vi. 1, 2---‘And I saw when
the Lamb opened one of the seven seals, and I heard one of the four living
creatures saying, as [with] a voice of thunder, Come. And I saw, and behold a
white horse: and he that sat on him had a bow; and a crown was given to him:
and he went forth conquering, and to conquer.’
It will be seen that we regard this vision as emblematic of
the Jewish war, which was introductory to the great final event of the
Parousia. Upon the opening of the first seal we behold the first act in the
tragic drama. It is announced by one of the four mystic beings, represented as
guarding the throne of God, exclaiming, with a voice of thunder, ‘Come!’ and
behold, an armed warrior, seated on a white horse, and holding in his hand a
bow, passes across the field of vision. A crown is bestowed upon the warrior,
who goes forth conquering, and to conquer.
This is a most vivid representation of the first scene in
the tragic drama of the Jewish war which commenced in the reign of Nero, A.D.
66, under the conduct of Vespasian. In the first scene we see the Roman invader
advancing to the combat. As yet the war has not actually begun; the warrior
rides upon a white horse; he holds in his had a bow, a weapon used at a
distance. It is fanciful to see in the crown given to the horseman a
presage that the diadem was to be placed on the head of Vespasian, or is it
only the token of victory? However this may be, the whole imagery, as Alford
observes, speaks of victory,---‘He went forth conquering and to conquer.’
OPENING OF THE SECOND SEAL.
Chap. vi. 3, 4.---‘And when he
opened the second seal, I heard the second living creature say, Come. And there
went out another horse that was red: and power was given unto him that sat
thereon to take peace from the earth [land], and that they should kill one
another: and there was given unto him a great sword.’
This symbol also speaks for itself. Hostilities have now
commenced; the white horse is succeeded by the red---the colour of blood. The
bow gives place to the sword. It is a great sword, for the carnage is to be
terrible. Peace flies from the land: all is strife and bloodshed. It is a civil
as well as a foreign war,---‘they kill one another.’
All this fitly represents the historical fact. The Jewish
war, under Vespasian, commenced at the furthest distance from Jerusalem in
Galilee, and gradually drew nearer and nearer to the doomed city. The Romans
were not the only agents in the work of slaughter that depopulated the land;
hostile factions among the Jews themselves turned their arms against one
another, so that it might be said that 'every man’s hand was against his
brother.’ The exchange of the bow for the sword indicates that the combatants
had now closed, and fought hand to hand: it is another act in the same tragedy.
It is worthy of notice that the language of the fourth verse
not obscurely indicates the scene of war. Peace is taken from the land [ek thz ghz]. Stuart has accurately
interpreted this circumstance: ‘Here, not the whole earth, but the land of
Palestine is especially denoted.’
THE OPENING OF THE THIRD SEAL.
Chap. vi. 5, 6.---‘And when he
opened the third seal, I heard the third living creature say, Come. And I
beheld, and lo a black horse; and he that sat on him had a pair of balances in
his hand. And I heard as it were a voice in the midst of the four living creatures,
saying, A measure of wheat for a denarius, and three measures of barley for a
denarius; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine.’
This symbol also is not difficult of interpretation. It
signifies the deepening horrors of the war. Famine follows on the heels of war
and slaughter. Food is now scarce in Judea, especially in the beleaguered
cities, and most of all in Jerusalem, after its investment by Titus. Wheat and
barley are at famine prices, for the daily wage of a labouring man (a denarius)
suffices to buy only a single measure of wheat (a choenix, or less than a
quart), and three times that quantity of inferior grain. This is significant of
terrible privation among the crowded masses in the besieged city.
Turning from prophecy to history the pages of Josephus
furnish us with a fearful commentary on this passage. He is speaking of the
scarcity of food in Jerusalem during the period of the siege:---
‘Many privately exchanged all they
were worth for a single measure of wheat, if they were rich; of barley, if they
were poor. Then, shutting themselves up in the most retired recesses of their
houses, some, from extremity of hunger, would eat the grain unprepared; others
would cook it according as necessity and fear dictated. A table was nowhere
spread, but snatching the dough half-baked from the fire, they tore it in
pieces.’
But what means injunction, ‘See thou hurt not the oil and
the wine’? This has greatly perplexed commentators, for such a command seems
not to accord with the prevalence of famine. If we are not mistaken, Josephus
will enable us to reconcile this apparent incongruity.
After stating that John of Gischala, one of the partisan
leaders who tyrannised over the miserable people in the last days of Jerusalem,
seized and confiscated the sacred vessels of the temple, Josephus goes on to
relate another act of sacrilege committed by the same chief, which seems to
have aroused the deepest indignation and horror in the mind of the
historian:---
‘Accordingly, drawing the sacred
wine and oil, which the priests kept for pouring on the burnt-offerings, and
which was deposited in the inner temple, he distributed them among his
adherents, who consumed without horror more than a hin in anointing themselves
and drinking. And here I cannot refrain from expressing what my feelings
suggest. I am of opinion that had the Romans deferred the punishment of these
wretches, either the earth would have opened and swallowed up the city, or it
would have been swept away by a deluge, or have shared the thunderbolt of the land
of Sodom. For it produced a generation far more ungodly than those who were
thus visited; for through the desperate madness of these men the whole nation
was involved in their ruin.’
This serves to explain the use of the word adikhshz [deal unjustly with] in
this injunction: ‘See thou deal not unjustly with the oil and the wine.’ Mr.
Elliott, in opposition to Dean Alford, contends for the sense ‘do not commit
injustice in respect to the oil,’ etc. Rinck, as quoted by Alford, renders
it ‘waste not,’ etc. The incident related by Josephus shows how the word adikhshz suits every variety of
rendering. The act of John was adikia in the sense of wanton waste.
OPENING OF THE FOURTH SEAL.
Chap. vi. 7, 8.---‘And when he had
opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth living creature saying,
Come. And I looked, and behold a pale horse; and his name that sat on him was
Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the
fourth part of the earth [land], to kill with sword, and with famine, and with
death, and by the beasts of the earth.'
The scene here is evidently the same, only with all the
horrors and miseries of the war intensified. The ghastly spectres of Death and
Hades now follow in the train of famine and war. The ‘four sore judgments of
God,’ which Ezekiel saw commissioned to destroy the land of Israel, ‘the sword,
and the famine, and the noisome beast, and the pestilence,’ are again let loose
upon the land, and by them the fourth part of its population is doomed to
perish. Never was there such a glut of mortality as in the war which terminated
in the siege and capture of Jerusalem. The best commentary on this passage is
to be found in the records of Josephus, as the following description will
show:---
‘All egress being now intercepted,
every hope of safety to the Jews was utterly cut off; and famine, with
distended jaws, was devouring the people by houses and families. The roofs were
filled with women and babes in the last stage; the streets with old men already
dead. Children and youths, swollen up, huddled together like spectres in the
market-places, and fell down wherever the pangs of death seized them. To inter
their relations they who were themselves affected had not strength; and those
still in health and vigour were deterred by the multitude of the dead and by
the uncertainty that hung over themselves. For many expired while burying
others, and many repaired to the cemeteries ere the fatal hour arrived.
‘Amidst these calamities there was
neither lamentation nor wailing: famine overpowered the affections. With dry
eyes and gaping mouths the slowly-dying gazed on those who had gone to their
rest before them. Profound silence reigned through the city, and a night
pregnant with death, and the brigands more dreadful still than these. For,
bursting open the houses, as they would a sepulchre, they plundered the dead,
and, dragging off the coverings from the bodies, departed with laughter. They
even tried the points of their swords in the carcases, and to prove the temper
of their blades would run them through some of those who were stretched still
breathing on the ground; others, who implored them to lend them their hand and
sword, they abandoned disdainfully to the famine. They all expired with their
eyes intently fixed on the temple, averting them from the insurgents whom they
left alive. These at first, finding the stench of the bodies insupportable,
ordered that they should be buried at the public expense; but afterwards, when
unequal to the task, they threw them from the walls into the ravines below.
‘But why need I enter into any
partial details of their calamities, when Mannoeus, the son of Lazarus, who at
this period took refuge with Titus, declared, that from the fourteenth of the
month Xanthicus, the day on which the Romans encamped before the walls, until
the new moon of Panemus, there were carried through that one gate, which had
been entrusted to him, a hundred and fifteen thousand eight hundred and eighty
corpses. This multitude was all of the poorer class; nor had he undertaken the
charge himself, but having been entrusted with the distribution of the public
fund, he was obliged to keep count. The remainder were buried by their
relations. The interment, however, consisted merely in bringing them forth and
casting them out of the city.
‘After him many of the higher ranks
escaped; and they brought word that full six hundred thousand of the humbler
classes had been thrown out through the gates. Of the others it was impossible
to ascertain the number. They stated, moreover, that when they had no longer
strength to carry out the poor they piled the carcases in the largest houses
and shut them up: and that a measure of wheat had been sold for a talent; and
that still later, when it was no longer possible to gather herbs, the city
being walled round, some were reduced to such distress that they searched the
sewers and the stale ordure of cattle, and ate the refuse; and what they would
formerly have turned away from with disgust then became food.’---Traill’s
Josephus, Jewish War, bk. v. chap. xii. § 3; chap. xiii. § 7.
OPENING OF THE FIFTH SEAL.
Chap. vi. 9-11.---‘And when he had
opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of them that were slain
for the word of God, and for the testimony which they held: and they cried with
a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and
avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth [land]? And a white robe was
given unto every one of them; and it was said unto them, that they should rest
yet for a little season, until their fellow-servants also and their brethren,
that should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled.’
This passage may be regarded as a crucial test of any
interpretation of the Apocalypse. It may be truly said that anything more
unsatisfactory, uncertain, and conjectural than the explanation given by those
interpreters who find in the Apocalypse a syllabus of ecclesiastical history
can scarcely be imagined. But if our guiding principle be correct, it will lead
us to such an interpretation as will demonstrate by its self-evidence that it
is the true one.
The scene now changes from the battle-field, and the scenes
of carnage and blood in the besieged and famished city, to the temple of God.
But it is still Jerusalem. The Christian martyrs whom Jerusalem had slain are
represented as crying aloud from under the altar, and appealing to the justice
of God no longer to delay the vindication of their cause, and the avenging of
their blood ‘on them that dwell in the land.’ This is a new and important scene
in the tragic drama, but one that is in perfect keeping with the teaching of
the New Testament. Our Lord forewarned the Jews that ‘upon them should come all
the righteous blood shed upon the earth, from the blood of righteous Abel, unto
the blood of Zacharias son of Barachaias, whom ye slew between the temple and
the altar. Verily I say unto you, All these things shall come upon this
generation’ (Matt. xxiii. 35, 36). In like manner He forewarned His
disciples that some of them would fall victims to Jewish enmity: ‘Then shall
they deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall kill you’ (Matt. xxiv. 9). All
this was to precede ‘the end’ (Matt. xxiv. 13). Our Lord also declared that
Jerusalem was deepest in the guilt of shedding innocent blood: she was the
murderess of the prophets; and upon her the most signal punishment was to fall
(Matt. xxiii. 31-39).
Here, then, we have the chief elements of the scene before
us. But this is not all. It is impossible not to be struck with the marked
resemblance between the vision of the fifth seal and our Lord’s parable of the
unjust judge (Luke xviii. 1-8): ‘And shall not God avenge his own elect, which
cry day and night unto him, though he bear long with them? I tell you that he
will avenge them speedily. Nevertheless, when the Son of man cometh, shall he
find faith in the land?’ This is more than resemblance: it is identity. In both
we find the same complanants,---the elect of God; they appeal to Him for
redress; in both we find the response to the appeal, ‘He will avenge them
speedily;’ in both we find the scene of their sufferings laid in the same
place---‘in the land’---i.e. the land of Judea. The vision and
the parable also mutually supplement one another. The vision tells us the cause
of the cry for vengeance, and who the appellants are, viz. the martyred
disciples of Jesus who have sealed their testimony with their blood. The
parable suggests the time when the retribution would arrive,---‘when the Son of
man cometh;’ and likewise the mournful fact that when the Parousia took place
it would find Israel still impenitent and still unbelieving.
The vision of the fifth seal likewise elucidates an obscure
passage which has hitherto baffled all attempts to solve its meaning. In 1
Peter iv. 6 we find the following statement: ‘For, for this cause was the
gospel preached also to them that are dead, that they might be judged according
to men in the flesh, but live according to God in the spirit.’ Referring the
reader back to the remarks made upon this passage at page 307, etc., it will
suffice here to recapitulate the conclusion there reached. The statement really
is, ‘For, for this cause a comforting message was brought even to the dead,
that they, though condemned in the flesh by man’s judgment, should live in the
spirit by the judgment of God.’ This evidently points to the vindication of those
who had by the unrighteous judgment of men suffered death for the truth of God;
it declares that they had been comforted after death by the tidings that they
should, by the divine judgment, enjoy eternal life. There is no allusion
anywhere to be found in Scripture to any such transaction, except in the
passage before us,---the vision of the fifth seal. This, however, precisely
meets all the requirements of the case. Here we find ‘the dead,’---the
Christian martyrs, who had died for the faith; they had been condemned in the
flesh by the unrighteous judgment of man. It is manifestly implied that they
had appealed to the righteous judgment of God. In response to their appeal ‘a
comforting message’ [euaggelion] had been communicated to them; they are told to rest a little while
until their brethren and fellow-servants who are to be killed like them shall
join them; while ‘white robes,’ the tokens of innocence and emblems of victory,
are given to them. We think it must be obvious that this scene under the fifth
seal exactly corresponds with the allusion of St. Peter and the parable of our
Lord. It is important also to observe the place which this scene occupies in
the tragic drama. It is after the outbreak, but before the conclusion, of the
Jewish war; it precedes by a little while the final catastrophe of the sixth
seal. It is the impatient cry of the martyred saints, ‘How long, O Lord, how
long?’ It calls for just retribution on those who had shed their blood; and it
distinctly specifies who they are by describing them as ‘them that dwell in the
land.’ And all this is immediately antecedent to the final catastrophe
under the next seal, which depicts the wrath of God coming upon the guilty land
‘to the uttermost.’ Here, then, we have a body of evidence so varied, so
minute, and so cumulative that we may venture to call it demonstration.
OPENING OF THE SIXTH SEAL.
Chap. vi. 12-17.---‘And I beheld
when he opened the sixth seal, and lo, there was a great earthquake; and the
sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood; and the
stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig-tree casteth her untimely
figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind. And the heaven departed as a scroll
when it is rolled together; and every mountain and island were moved out of
their places. And the kings of the earth [land], and the great men, and the
rich men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men, and every bondman, and
every free man, hid themselves in the dens and in the rocks of the mountains;
and said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us from the face of
him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: for the great
day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?’
We now come to the last act of this awful tragedy: the
catastrophe which closes the second vision. It may excite surprise that the
catastrophe occurs under the sixth seal, and not under the seventh, as we might
have expected. But the seventh seal is made the link of connection between the
second and the third visions, and is most artistically employed to introduce
the next series of seven, viz. the vision of the seven trumpets. We may here
observe that each of the visions culminates in a catastrophe, or signal act of
divine judgment, bringing destruction on the wicked, and salvation to the
righteous.
No one can fail to observe that nearly every feature in this
awful scene occurs in our Lord’s prophecy on the Mount of Olives with reference
to the coming judgments on the city and nation of Israel. There is, therefore,
no room for a moment’s uncertainty as to the meaning of the vision of the sixth
seal; but the more closely that every symbol is studied, the more distinctly
will be seen its relation to the great catastrophe. This is the ‘dies
irae’---the hmera
kuriakh---‘the
great and terrible day of the Lord’ predicted by Malachi, by John the Baptist,
by St. Paul, by St. Peter, and, above all, by our Lord in His apocalyptic
discourse on the Mount of Olives. It is the expected consummation for which the
apostolic church was watching and waiting,---the day of the judgment for the
guilty nation, and, as we shall presently see, the day of redemption and reward
for the people of God.
It will be proper, first, to note the correspondence between
the symbols in the vision and those in our Lord’s prophetic discourse:---
THE SIXTH SEAL.
|
THE PROPHECY ON OLIVET.
|
‘And lo, there was a great earthquake.’
|
‘And there shall be earthquakes in divers places’
(Luke xxi. 11; Matt. xxiv. 7).
|
‘And the sun became black as sackcloth of hair.’
|
‘Immediately after the tribulation of those days
shall the sun be darkened.’
|
‘And the moon became as blood.’
|
‘And the moon shall not give her light.’
|
‘And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth.’
|
‘And the stars shall fall from heaven.’
|
‘And the heavens departed as a scroll when it is
rolled together.’
|
‘And the powers of the heavens shall be shaken’
(Matt. xxiv. 29).
|
‘And the kings, etc., hid themselves, . . . and said
to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us,’ etc.
|
‘Then shall they begin to say to the mountains, Fall
on us: and to the hills, Cover us’ (Luke xxiii. 30).
|
The comparison of these parallel passages must satisfy every
reasonable mind that they both refer to one and the same event. What that event
is our Lord’s words decisively determine: ‘Verily I say unto you, This
generation shall not pass till all these things be fulfilled’ (Matt. xxiv. 34).
The only passage which does not come within the discourse on the Mount of
Olives is the address to the women who followed our Lord in the way to Calvary,
yet even there the limitation of the time is clearly indicated: ‘Daughters of
Jerusalem, weep not for me, but weep for yourselves and for your
children;’ implying that the calamities which He predicted would come in
the lifetime of themselves and their children. The same nearness of the time is
marked by the phrase, ‘Behold, the days are coming’ (Luke xxiii. 29).
No doubt it will appear an objection to this explanation
that the destruction of Jerusalem, awful as it was, appears inadequate as the
antitype of the imagery of the sixth seal. The object applies equally to our Lord’s
prophecy where His own authority determines the application of the signs.
Indeed it applies to all prophecy: for prophecy is poetry, and Oriental poetry
also, in which gorgeous symbolical imagery is the vesture of thought. Besides,
the objection is based upon an inadequate estimate of the real significance and
importance of the destruction of Jerusalem. That event is not simply a tragical
historical incident; it is not to be looked at as in the same category with the
siege of Troy or the destruction of Tyre or of Carthage. It was a grand
providential epoch; the close of an aeon; the winding up of a great period in
the divine government of the world. The material catastrophe was but the
outward and visible sign of a mighty crisis in the realm of the unseen and the
spiritual.
At the same time it is to be observed that the historical
facts underlying these symbols are sufficiently real and tangible. The
consternation and terror here depicted as seizing on ‘the kings of the land,
the great men,’ etc., are in perfect accord with the scenes in the last days of
Jerusalem as described by Josephus. Premising that by ‘the kings of the land’ [basileiz thz ghz] are meant the rulers
of Judea, as we shall be able to show, we find the prophetic description
wonderfully correspondent with the historical facts. First, the scene in the
vision is evidently laid in a country abounding in rocky caverns and
hiding-places, which, it is well known, are characteristic of Judea. The
limestone hills of that country are literally honeycombed with caverns, which
have been the dens of robbers and the shelter of fugitives from time
immemorial. Ewald acknowledges ‘that there is here a special reference to the
peculiarities of Palestine as to its rocks and caves, which afford places of shelter
for fugitives.’ (Quoted by Stuart, Apocalypse, in loc.) These two notes,
the land, and its geological character, fix the locale of the scene.
Secondly, it is a fact attested by Josephus that the last hiding-places of the
infatuated citizens of Jerusalem were the rocky caverns and the subterranean
passages into which they fled for refuge after the capture of the city:---
‘The last hope,’ says Josephus,
‘that buoyed up the tyrants and their brigand bands lay in the subterranean
excavations, in which, should they take refuge, they expected that no search
would be made for them, and purposed, after the final overthrow of the city,
when the Romans should have withdrawn, to come forth and seek safety in flight.
But this was after all a mere dream, for they were unable to hide themselves
from the observation either of God, or of the Romans.’
Still more striking, if possible, is the fact mentioned by
Josephus, that Simon, one of the chiefs of the rebellion, secreted himself
after the capture of the city in one of these subterranean hiding-places. The
incident is thus related by the Jewish historian:---
‘This Simon, during the siege of
Jerusalem, had occupied the upper town; but when the Roman army had entered
within the walls and was laying the whole city waste, accompanied by the most
faithful of his friends, and some stonecutters with the iron tools required by
them in their trade, and with provisions sufficient for many days, he let
himself down with all his party into one of the secret caverns, and advanced
through it as far as the ancient excavations permitted. Here, being met by firm
ground, they mined it, in hope of being able to proceed farther, and, emerging
in a place of safety, thus effect their escape. But the result of the
operations proved the hope fallacious. The miners advance slowly and with
difficulty, and the provisions, though husbanded, were on the point of failing.
‘Thereupon Simon, thinking that he
might pass a cheat upon the Romans by the effect of terror, dressed himself in
white tunics, and buttoning a purple cloak over them, rose up out of the earth
at the very spot where the temple formerly stood. At first indeed, the
beholders were seized with amazement, and stood fixed to the spot; but
afterwards, approaching nearer, they demanded who he was. This Simon refused to
tell them, but directed them to call the general; on which they ran quickly to
Terentius Rufus, who had been left in command of the army. He accordingly came,
and after hearing from Simon the whole truth, he kept him in irons, and
acquainted Caesar with the particulars of his capture . . . . His ascent out of
the ground, however, led at that period to the discovery, in other caverns, of
a vast multitude of the other insurgents. On the return of Caesar to the
maritime Caesarea, Simon was brought to him in chains, and he ordered him to be
kept for the triumph which he was preparing to celebrate in Rome.’
EPISODE OF THE SEALING OF THE SERVANTS OF
GOD.
Chap. vii. 1-17.---‘After this, I
saw four angels standing on the four corners of the earth, holding the four
winds of the earth, that the wind should not blow on the earth, nor on the sea,
nor on any tree. And I saw another angel ascending from the east, having the
seal of the living God; and he cried with a loud voice to the four angels, to
whom it was given to hurt the earth and the sea, saying, Hurt not the earth,
neither the sea, nor the trees, till we have sealed the servants of our God on
their foreheads. And I heard the number of them which were sealed; and there
were sealed an hundred and forty and four thousand of all the tribes of the
children of Israel,’ etc.
In the very crisis of the catastrophe the action is suddenly
suspended until the safety of the servants of God is assured. The four
destroying angels who are commissioned to let loose the elements of wrath upon
the guilty land are commanded to stay the execution of the sentence until ‘the
servants of our God have been sealed on their foreheads.’ Accordingly an angel,
having ‘the seal of the living God,’ sets marks upon the faithful, the
nationality and number of whom are distinctly declared,---‘an hundred and forty
and four thousand from every tribe of the children of Israel.’ In addition to
these, an innumerable multitude, ‘of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and
tongues,’ are seen standing before the throne, clothed with white robes and
with palms of victory in their hands, ascribing praise and glory to God amid
the felicity and splendours of heaven.
This representation is generally regarded as an episode, or
digression from the main action of the piece. No doubt it is so; but at the
same time it is essential to the completeness of the catastrophe, and in fact
an integral part of it.
It will be seen that in every catastrophe in this book of
visions,---and every vision ends in a catastrophe,---there are two parts, viz.
the judgment inflicted upon the enemies of Christ and the blessedness conferred
upon His servants.
Now, under the sixth seal, where the catastrophe of the
vision is placed, we have already seen the first part described, viz. the
judgment of the enemies of God; but the other part, the deliverance of the
people of God, is represented in the chapter before us. The progress of
judgment is even arrested until the safety of the servants of Christ is
secured.
What, then, is the meaning of this episode?
In the predictions relating to the ‘end of the age’ we
invariably find a promise of safety and blessedness to the disciples of Christ,
coupled with declarations of coming wrath upon their enemies. To give two or
three examples out of many: in our Lord’s prophecy on the Mount of Olives, of
which the Apocalypse is the echo and expansion, He warns His disciples to make
their escape from Judea when they saw ‘Jerusalem compassed about with armies’
(Luke xxi. 20), ‘and the abomination of desolation standing in the holy place’
(Matt. xxiv. 15). He assures them that ‘there should not an hair of their head
perish;’ that when the signs of His coming began to appear, then they should
look up, and lift up their heads, because their redemption was drawing nigh
(Luke xxi. 18-28). That the Son of man would send His angels with a great sound
of a trumpet, and would ‘gather together His elect from the four winds, from
one end of heaven to the other’ (Matt. xxiv. 31). That in the great judgment
day, which was to follow the destruction of Jerusalem, the wicked should ‘go away
into everlasting punishment, but the righteous into everlasting life’ (Matt.
xxv. 46).
In harmony with these declarations we find the apostles
teaching the churches that when ‘the day of the Lord’ came, ‘sudden destruction
would overtake the enemies of God, while Christians would obtain salvation’ (1
Thess. v. 2, 3, 9); that when the Lord Jesus was ‘revealed from heaven with his
mighty angels, in flaming fire, to take vengeance on them that know not God,’
His faithful people would enter into ‘rest,’ and would ‘be counted worthy of
the kingdom of God’ (2 Thess. i. 5-9).
It is this deliverance and salvation promised to the
disciples of Christ which is symbolically shadowed forth in the episode to the
sixth seal. The imagery by which it is described is evidently taken from the
scene beheld in vision by the prophet Ezekiel (chap. ix.), where ‘the men that
sigh, and that cry for all the abominations of Jerusalem,’ have ‘a mark set
upon their foreheads,’ which was to ensure their safety when the executioners
of divine justice went forth to slay the inhabitants of the city.
It is worthy of remark that Jerusalem is the scene of
judgment alike in the prophecy of Ezekiel and in the Apocalypse; and the
allusion by St. Peter to this very transaction in Ezekiel’s vision, as about to
be repeated in the Jerusalem of his own day, is very significant. (1 Pet. iv.
17.)
But the fullest light is thrown upon this episode by the
words of our Lord: ‘The Son of man shall send his angels with a great sound of
a trumpet, and shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from one
end of heaven to the other’ (Matt. xxiv. 31). This episode is the
representation of the accomplishment of that promise. While wrath to the
uttermost is being poured upon the land; while the tribes of the land are
mourning; while the enemies of God are fleeing to hide in the dens and caves;
in that dread hour the angel’s trumpet convokes the faithful remnant of the
people of God, ‘that they may be hid in the day of the Lord’s anger.’ The time
was now full come; for all this, it must be remembered, was to be witnessed by
the apostles themselves, or at least by some of them; for our Lord’s own
generation was not to pass till all these things were fulfilled.
Accordingly it was the cherished hope of the Christians of
the apostolic age that they should escape the general doom, and enter into the
possession of immortality by the instantaneous change which should come over
them at the appearing of the Lord. St. Paul reassured the Christians of
Thessalonica by telling them that they which were alive, and remained unto the
coming of the Lord, should not take precedence of those who had departed in the
faith previous to the Lord’s coming. He declares to them, by the word of the
Lord, that ‘the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the
voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and, first, the dead in
Christ shall rise; then we, the living, who remain behind, shall be caught up
all together with them, in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air. And so
shall we ever be with the Lord’ (1 Thess. iv. 15-17). He alludes again to this
same confident expectation in 2 Thess. ii. 1, where he says, ‘Now we beseech
you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our
gathering together unto him,’ etc. This peculiar expression, ‘our gathering
together’ [episunagogh], would be scarcely
intelligible but for the light thrown upon it in Matt. xxiv. 31 and in Rev.
vii. The same period, the same transaction, are referred to in our Lord’s
prophecy, in St. Paul’s epistle, and in the episode before us. Here is the
great consummation, and the assuring of the safety of the people of God when
destruction overtakes the impenitent and unbelieving. All this belongs to the
great crisis at the end of the aeon,---that is, at the close of the Jewish
dispensation. The finger of the Lord has defined the limits beyond which we may
not go in determining the period of this transaction: ‘Verily I say unto you,
This generation shall not pass till all these things are fulfilled.’ Whatever
our opinion may be as to the extent or the manner of the fulfillment of the
prediction, uttered alike by our Lord, by St. Paul, and by St. John, of one
thing can be no doubt,---the Scriptures are irrevocably committed to the
assertion of the fact.
It will be remarked that there are two classes, or
divisions, of ‘the people of God’ who are specified in this episode. The first
class belongs to a particular nation,---‘the hundred and forty and four
thousand out of every tribe of the children of Israel.’ These must of necessity
represent the Jewish Christian church of the apostolic period. But in
addition to these there is a multitude which no man could number, belonging to
all nationalities; that is to say, not Israelites but Gentiles. This class,
therefore, must of necessity represent the Gentile church of the
apostolic period; the ‘uncircumcision,’ who were admitted into the privileges
of the covenant people, called to be ‘fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and
partakers of God’s promise in Christ by the gospel,’ along with the Jewish
believers. This representation implies that the danger and deliverance
symbolised by the sealing of the servants of God were not confined to Judea and
Jerusalem. The religion of Jesus of Nazareth was a proscribed and persecuted
faith over the whole Roman Empire before the outbreak of the Jewish war and the
abrogation of the Jewish economy. Accordingly the redeemed in the vision, the
‘white-robed multitude,’ are said to come out of great tribulation: an
expression which gives us a clue to the determination of the time and
the persons here referred to. Our Lord, when predicting the season of
unparalleled affliction that was to precede the catastrophe of Jerusalem and
Juda, says, ‘Then shall be great tribulation [qliyiz megalh], such as was not since
the beginning of the world,’ etc. (Matt. xxiv. 21). Now in the statement in the
episode, ‘These are they that came out of great tribulation,’ there is
an unquestionable allusion to our Lord’s words. The proper rendering, as Alford
points out, is,---‘These are they that came out of the great tribulation’
[ek thz
qliyewz thz megalhz], the definite article being most emphatic, and the tribulation
plainly in allusion to the prediction in Matt. xxiv. 21.
We are thus brought, by the guidance of the word of God
itself, to one and the same conclusion; and it is impossible not to be
impressed by the concurrence of so many different lines of argument leading to
one result. We are justified, therefore, in concluding that the episode of the
sealing of the servants of God represents the safety and deliverance of the
faithful in the fearful time of judgment which, at the Parousia, overtook the
guilty city and land of Israel.
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