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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1] [2]
[3] [4]
[5] [6]
[7] [8]
[9] [10]
[11] [12]
[13] [14]
[15] [16]
[17] [18]
[19] [20]
[21] [22]
INTRODUCTION
AUTHENTICITY.--The author calls himself
John
(Re 1:1, 4, 9; 2:8).
JUSTIN MARTYR [Dialogue
with Trypho, p. 308] (A.D. 139-161) quotes
from the Apocalypse, as John the apostle's work, the prophecy of
the millennium of the saints, to be followed by the general
resurrection and judgment. This testimony of
JUSTIN is referred to also by
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 4.18].
JUSTIN MARTYR, in the early
part of the second century, held his controversy with
TRYPHO, a learned Jew, at Ephesus, where
John had been living thirty or thirty-five years before: he says that
"the Revelation had been given to John, one of the twelve apostles of
Christ." MELITO, bishop of Sardis (about
A.D. 171), one of the seven churches
addressed, a successor, therefore, of one of the seven angels, is
said by EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History,
4.26] to have written treatises on the Apocalypse of John. The
testimony of the bishop of Sardis is the more impartial, as Sardis is
one of the churches severely reproved
(Re 3:1).
So also THEOPHILUS OF ANTIOCH
(about A.D. 180), according to EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 4.26], quoted
testimonies from the Apocalypse of John. EUSEBIUS
says the same of Apollonius, who lived in Asia Minor in the end of the
second century. IRENÆUS (about A.D. 180), a hearer of POLYCARP,
the disciple of John, and supposed by ARCHBISHOP
USHER to be the angel of the Church of
Smyrna, is most decided again and again in quoting the Apocalypse
as the work of the apostle John [Against Heresies, 4.20.11;
4.21.3; 4.30.4; 5.36.1; 5.30.3; 5.35.2]. In [5.30.1], alluding to the
mystical number of the beast, six hundred sixty-six
(Re 13:18),
found in all old copies, he says, "We do not hazard a confident theory
as to the name of Antichrist; for if it had been necessary that his
name should be proclaimed openly at the present time, it would have
been declared by him who saw the apocalyptic vision; for it was seen
at no long time back, but almost in our generation, towards the end of
Domitian's reign." In his work Against Heresies, published
ten years after Polycarp's martyrdom, he quotes the Apocalypse twenty
times, and makes long extracts from it, as inspired Scripture. These
testimonies of persons contemporary with John's immediate successors,
and more or less connected with the region of the seven churches to
which Revelation is addressed, are most convincing. TERTULLIAN, of North Africa (about A.D. 220), [Against Marcion, 3.14], quotes the
apostle John's descriptions in the Apocalypse of the sword proceeding
out of the Lord's mouth
(Re 19:15),
and of the heavenly city
(Re 21:1-27).
Compare On the Resurrection of the Flesh [27]; A Treatise on
the Soul, [8, 9, &c.]; The Prescription Against Heretics,
[33]. The MURATORI fragment of the canon (about
A.D. 200) refers to John the apostle writing to
the seven churches. HIPPOLYTUS, bishop of Ostia,
near Rome (about A.D. 240) [On Antichrist,
p. 67], quotes
Re 17:1-18,
as the writing of John the apostle. Among
HIPPOLYTUS' works, there is specified in the
catalogue on his statue, a treatise "on the Apocalypse and Gospel
according to John." CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA (about A.D. 200)
[Miscellanies, 6.13], alludes to the twenty-four seats on which
the elders sit as mentioned by John in the Apocalypse
(Re 4:5);
also, [Who Is the Rich Man Who Shall Be Saved? 42], he mentions
John's return from Patmos to Ephesus on the death of the Roman tyrant.
ORIGEN (about A.D. 233),
[Commentary on Matthew, in EUSEBIUS
Ecclesiastical History, 6.25], mentions John as the author of
the Apocalypse, without expressing any doubts as to its authenticity;
also, in Commentary on Matthew, [16.6], he quotes
Re 1:9,
and says, "John seems to have beheld the Apocalypse in the island of
Patmos." VICTORINUS, bishop of Pettau in Pannonia,
who suffered martyrdom under Diocletian in A.D.
303, wrote the earliest extant commentary on the Apocalypse. Though the
Old Syriac Peschito version does not contain the Apocalypse, yet
EPHREM THE SYRIAN (about
A.D. 378) frequently quotes the Apocalypse as
canonical, and ascribes it to John.
Its canonicity and inspiration (according to a scholium of
ANDREAS OF CAPPADOCIA) are
attested by PAPIAS, a hearer of John, and
associate of POLYCARP. PAPIAS was bishop of Hierapolis, near Laodicea,
one of the seven churches. WORDSWORTH conjectures
that a feeling of shame, on account of the rebukes of Laodicea
in Revelation, may have operated on the Council of Laodicea, so as to
omit Revelation from its list of books to be read publicly (?).
The Epistle of the churches of Lyons and Vienne to the churches of Asia
and Phrygia (in EUSEBIUS, [Ecclesiastical
History, 5.1-3]), in the persecution under Marcus Aurelius (A.D. 77) quotes
Re 1:5; 3:14; 14:4; 22:11,
as Scripture. CYPRIAN (about
A.D. 250) also, in Epistle 13, quotes
Re 2:5
as Scripture; and in Epistle 25 he quotes
Re 3:21,
as of the same authority as the Gospel. (For other instances, see
ALFORD'S Prolegomena, from whom mainly this
summary of evidence has been derived).
ATHANASIUS, in his Festival Epistle,
enumerates the Apocalypse among the canonical Scriptures, to
which none must add, and from which none must take away.
JEROME [Epistle to Paulinus] includes in
the canon the Apocalypse, adding, "It has as many mysteries as words.
All praise falls short of its merits. In each of its words lie hid
manifold senses." Thus an unbroken chain of testimony down from the
apostolic period confirms its canonicity and authenticity.
The ALOGI [EPIPHANIUS,
Heresies, 51] and CAIUS the Roman presbyter
[EUSEBIUS, Ecclesiastical History, 3.28],
towards the end of the second and beginning of the third century,
rejected John's Apocalypse on mere captious grounds. CAIUS, according to JEROME [On
Illustrious Men], about A.D. 210, attributed
it to Cerinthus, on the ground of its supporting the millennial reign
on earth. DIONYSIUS OF ALEXANDRIA mentions many before his time who rejected it
because of its obscurity and because it seemed to support Cerinthus'
dogma of an earthly and carnal kingdom; whence they attributed it to
Cerinthus. This DIONYSIUS, scholar of
ORIGEN, and bishop of Alexandria
(A.D. 247), admits its inspiration (in
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 7.10]),
but attributes it to some John distinct from John the apostle, on the
ground of its difference of style and character, as compared with
John's Gospel and Epistle, as also because the name John is several
times mentioned in the Apocalypse, which is always kept back in both
the Gospel and Epistle; moreover, neither does the Epistle make any
allusion to the Apocalypse, nor the Apocalypse to the Epistle; and the
style is not pure Greek, but abounds in barbarisms and
solecisms. EUSEBIUS wavers in opinion
[Ecclesiastical History, 24.39] as to whether it is, or is not,
to be ranked among the undoubtedly canonical Scriptures. His antipathy
to the millennial doctrine would give an unconscious bias to his
judgment on the Apocalypse. CYRIL OF JERUSALEM (A.D. 386),
[Catechetical Lectures, 4.35,36], omits the Apocalypse in
enumerating the New Testament Scriptures to be read privately as well
as publicly. "Whatever is not read in the churches, that do not even
read by thyself; the apostles and ancient bishops of the Church who
transmitted them to us were far wiser than thou art." Hence, we see
that, in his day, the Apocalypse was not read in the churches. Yet in
Catechetical Lectures, 1.4 he quotes
Re 2:7, 17;
and in Catechetical Lectures, 1; 15.13 he draws the prophetical
statement from
Re 17:11,
that the king who is to humble the three kings
(Da 7:8, 20)
is the eighth king. In Catechetical Lectures, 15 and 27, he
similarly quotes from
Re 12:3, 4.
ALFORD conjectures that CYRIL
had at some time changed his opinion, and that these references to the
Apocalypse were slips of memory whereby he retained phraseology which
belonged to his former, not his subsequent views. The sixtieth canon
(if genuine) of the Laodicean Council in the middle of the fourth
century omits the Apocalypse from the canonical books. The Eastern
Church in part doubted, the Western Church, after the fifth century,
universally recognized, the Apocalypse. CYRIL OF
ALEXANDRIA [On Worship, 146], though
implying the fact of some doubting its genuineness, himself undoubtedly
accepts it as the work of St. John. ANDREAS OF
CÆSAREA, in Cappadocia, recognized as
genuine and canonical, and wrote the first entire and connected
commentary on, the Apocalypse. The sources of doubt seem to have been,
(1) the antagonism of many to the millennium, which is set forth in it;
(2) its obscurity and symbolism having caused it not to be read in the
churches, or to be taught to the young. But the most primitive
tradition is unequivocal in its favor. In a word, the objective
evidence is decidedly for it; the only arguments against it seem to
have been subjective.
The personal notices of John in the Apocalypse occur
Re 1:1, 4, 9;
Re 22:8.
Moreover, the writer's addresses to the churches of Proconsular
Asia
(Re 2:1)
accord with the concurrent tradition, that after John's return from his
exile in Patmos, at the death of Domitian, under Nerva, he resided for
long, and died at last in Ephesus, in the time of Trajan [EUSEBIUS, Ecclesiastical History, 3.20,23]. If the
Apocalypse were not the inspired work of John, purporting as it does to
be an address from their superior to the seven churches of Proconsular
Asia, it would have assuredly been rejected in that region;
whereas the earliest testimonies in those churches are all in
its favor. One person alone was entitled to use language of authority
such as is addressed to the seven angels of the churches--namely, John,
as the last surviving apostle and superintendent of all the churches.
Also, it accords with John's manner to assert the accuracy of his
testimony both at the beginning and end of his book (compare
Re 1:2, 3,
and 22:8,
with Joh 1:14; 21:24;
1Jo 1:1, 2).
Again, it accords with the view of the writer being an inspired
apostle that he addresses the angels or presidents of the several
churches in the tone of a superior addressing inferiors. Also,
he commends the Church of Ephesus for trying and convicting "them which
say they are apostles, and are not," by which he implies his own
undoubted claim to apostolic inspiration
(Re 2:2),
as declaring in the seven epistles Christ's will revealed through
him.
As to the difference of style, as compared with the Gospel and Epistle,
the difference of subject in part accounts for it, the visions
of the seer, transported as he was above the region of sense,
appropriately taking a form of expression abrupt, and unbound by the
grammatical laws which governed his writings of a calmer and more
deliberate character. Moreover, as being a Galilean Hebrew, John, in
writing a Revelation akin to the Old Testament prophecies, naturally
reverted to their Hebraistic style. ALFORD
notices, among the features of resemblance between the styles of the
Apocalypse and John's Gospel and Epistle: (1) the characteristic
appellation of our Lord, peculiar to John exclusively, "the Word of
God"
(Re 19:13;
compare
Joh 1:1;
1Jo 1:1).
(2) the phrase, "he that overcometh"
(Re 2:7, 11, 17;
3:5, 12, 21; 12:11; 15:2; 17:14; 21:7;
compare
Joh 16:33
1Jo 2:13, 14; 4:4; 5:4, 5).
(3) The Greek term (alethinos) for "true," as opposed to
that which is shadowy and unreal
(Re 3:7, 14;
6:10; 15:3; 16:7; 19:2, 9, 11; 21:5; 22:6).
This term, found only once in Luke
(Lu 16:11),
four times in Paul
(1Th 1:9;
Heb 8:2; 9:24; 10:22),
is found nine times in John's Gospel
(Joh 1:9;
4:23, 37; 6:32; 7:28; 8:16; 15:1
Joh 17:3; 19:3, 5),
twice in John's First Epistle
(1Jo 2:8; 5:20),
and ten times in Revelation
(Re 3:7, 14;
6:10; 15:3; 16:7; 19:2, 9, 11; 21:5
Re 22:6).
(4) The Greek diminutive for "Lamb" (arnion, literally,
"lambkin") occurs twenty-nine times in the Apocalypse, and the only
other place where it occurs is
Joh 21:15.
In John's writings alone is Christ called directly "the Lamb"
(Joh 1:29, 36).
In
1Pe 1:19,
He is called "as a lamb without blemish," in allusion to
Isa 53:7.
So the use of "witness," or "testimony"
(Re 1:2, 9; 6:9; 11:7,
&c.; compare
Joh 1:7, 8, 15, 19, 32;
1Jo 1:2; 4:14; 5:6-11).
"Keep the word," or "commandments"
(Re 3:8, 10; 12:17;
compare
Joh 8:51, 55; 14:15).
The assertion of the same thing positively and negatively
(Re 2:2, 6, 8, 13; 3:8, 17, 18;
compare
Joh 1:3, 6, 7, 20;
1Jo 2:27, 28).
Compare also
1Jo 2:20, 27
with Re 3:18,
as to the spiritual anointing. The seeming solecisms of style
are attributable to that,inspired elevation which is above mere
grammatical rules, and are designed to arrest the reader's attention by
the peculiarity of the phrase, so as to pause and search into some deep
truth lying beneath. The vivid earnestness of the inspired writer,
handling a subject so transcending all others, raises him above all
servile adherence to ordinary rules, so that at times he abruptly
passes from one grammatical construction to another, as he graphically
sets the thing described before the eye of the reader. This is not due
to ignorance of grammar, for he "has displayed a knowledge of
grammatical rules in other much more difficult constructions" [WINER]. The connection of thought is more
attended to than mere grammatical connection. Another consideration to
be taken into account is that two-fifths of the whole being the
recorded language of others, he moulds his style accordingly. Compare
TREGELLES' Introduction to Revelation from
Heathen Authorities.
TREGELLES well says [New Testament Historic
Evidence], "There is no book of the New Testament for which we have
such clear, ample, and numerous testimonies in the second century as we
have in favor of the Apocalypse. The more closely the witnesses were
connected with the apostle John (as was the case with
IRENÆUS), the more explicit is their
testimony. That doubts should prevail in after ages must have
originated either in ignorance of the earlier testimony, or else from
some supposed intuition of what an apostle ought to have
written. The objections on the ground of internal style can
weigh nothing against the actual evidence. It is in vain to argue, a
priori, that John could not have written this book when we have
the evidence of several competent witnesses that he did write
it."
RELATION OF THE
APOCALYPSE TO THE REST OF THE
CANON.--GREGORY OF
NYSSA [tom. 3, p. 601], calls Revelation "the last
book of grace." It completes the volume of inspiration, so that we are
to look for no further revelation till Christ Himself shall come.
Appropriately the last book completing the canon was written by John,
the last survivor of the apostles. The New Testament is composed of the
historical books, the Gospels and Acts, the doctrinal Epistles, and the
one prophetical book, Revelation. The same apostle wrote the last of
the Gospels, and probably the last of the Epistles, and the only
prophetical book of the New Testament. All the books of the New
Testament had been written, and were read in the Church assemblies,
some years before John's death. His life was providentially prolonged
that he might give the final attestation to Scripture. About the year
A.D. 100, the bishops of Asia (the angels of the
seven churches) came to John at EPHESUS, bringing
him copies of the three Gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, and desired
of him a statement of his apostolical judgment concerning them;
whereupon he pronounced them authentic, genuine, and inspired, and at
their request added his own Gospel to complete the fourfold aspect of
the Gospel of Christ (compare MURATORI
[Fragment on the Canon of Scripture]; EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 3.24]; JEROME [Commentary on Matthew]; VICTORINUS on the Apocalypse; THEODORET [Ecclesiastical History, 39]). A Greek
divine, quoted in ALLATIUS, calls Revelation "the
seal of the whole Bible." The canon would be incomplete without
Revelation. Scripture is a complete whole, its component books, written
in a period ranging over one thousand five hundred years, being
mutually connected. Unity of aim and spirit pervades the entire, so
that the end is the necessary sequence of the middle, and the middle of
the beginning. Genesis presents before us man and his bride in
innocence and blessedness, followed by man's fall through Satan's
subtlety, and man's consequent misery, his exclusion from Paradise and
its tree of life and delightful rivers. Revelation presents, in reverse
order, man first liable to sin and death, but afterwards made conqueror
through the blood of the Lamb; the first Adam and Eve, represented by
the second Adam, Christ, and the Church. His spotless bride, in
Paradise, with free access to the tree of life and the crystal water of
life that flows from the throne of God. As Genesis foretold the
bruising of the serpent's head by the woman's seed
(Ge 3:15),
so Revelation declares the final accomplishment of that prediction
(Re 19:1-20:15).
PLACE AND TIME OF WRITING.--The best authorities
among the Fathers state that John was exiled under Domitian
(IRENÆUS [Against Heresies, 5; 30];
CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA;
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 3.20]).
VICTORINUS says that he had to labor in the mines
of Patmos. At Domitian's death, A.D. 95, he
returned to Ephesus under the Emperor Nerva. Probably it was
immediately after his return that he wrote, under divine inspiration,
the account of the visions vouchsafed to him in Patmos
(Re 1:2, 9).
However,
Re 10:4
seems to imply that he wrote the visions immediately after seeing them.
Patmos is one of the Sporades. Its circumference is about thirty miles.
"It was fitting that when forbidden to go beyond certain bounds of the
earth's lands, he was permitted to penetrate the secrets of heaven"
[BEDE, Explanation of the Apocalypse on
chap. 1]. The following arguments favor an earlier date, namely, under
Nero: (1) EUSEBIUS [Demonstration of the
Gospel] unites in the same sentence John's banishment with the
stoning of James and the beheading of Paul, which were under
Nero. (2) CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA'S'S story of the robber reclaimed by
John, after he had pursued, and with difficulty overtaken him, accords
better with John then being a younger man than under Domitian, when he
was one hundred years old. Arethas, in the sixth century, applies the
sixth seal to the destruction of Jerusalem (A.D.
70), adding that the Apocalypse was written before that event. So the
Syriac version states he was banished by Nero the Cæsar.
Laodicea was overthrown by an earthquake (A.D. 60)
but was immediately rebuilt, so that its being called "rich and
increased with goods" is not incompatible with this book having been
written under the Neronian persecution (A.D. 64).
But the possible allusions to it in
Heb 10:37;
compare
Re 1:4, 8; 4:8; 22:12;
Heb 11:10;
compare
Re 21:14;
Heb 12:22, 23;
compare
Re 14:1;
Heb 8:1, 2;
compare
Re 11:19; 15:5; 21:3;
Heb 4:12;
compare
Re 1:16; 2:12, 16; 19:13, 15;
Heb 4:9;
compare
Re 20:1-15;
also
1Pe 1:7, 13; 4:13,
with Re 1:1;
1Pe 2:9
with Re 5:10;
2Ti 4:8,
with Re 2:26, 27; 3:21; 11:18;
Eph 6:12,
with Re 12:7-12;
Php 4:3,
with Re 3:5; 13:8; 17:8; 20:12, 15;
Col 1:18,
with Re 1:5;
1Co 15:52,
with Re 10:7; 11:15-18,
make a date before the destruction of Laodicea possible. Cerinthus is
stated to have died before John; as then he borrowed much in his
Pseudo-Apocalypse from John's, it is likely the latter was at an
earlier date than Domitian's reign. See TILLOCH'S
Introduction to Apocalypse. But the Pauline benediction
(Re 1:4)
implies it was written after Paul's death under Nero.
TO WHAT READERS ADDRESSED.--The inscription states
that it is addressed to the seven churches of Asia, that is,
Proconsular Asia. John's reason for fixing on the number seven
(for there were more than seven churches in the region meant by "Asia,"
for instance, Magnesia and Tralles) was doubtless because seven
is the sacred number implying totality and universality: so it is
implied that John, through the medium of the seven churches, addresses
in the Spirit the Church of all places and ages. The Church in its
various states of spiritual life or deadness, in all ages and places,
is represented by the seven churches, and is addressed with words of
consolation or warning accordingly. Smyrna and Philadelphia alone of
the seven are honored with unmixed praise, as faithful in tribulation
and rich in good works. Heresies of a decided kind had by this time
arisen in the churches of Asia, and the love of many had waxed cold,
while others had advanced to greater zeal, and one had sealed his
testimony with his blood.
OBJECT.--It begins with admonitory addresses to
the seven churches from the divine Son of man, whom John saw in vision,
after a brief introduction which sets forth the main subject of the
book, namely, to "show unto His servants things which must shortly come
to pass" (the first through third chapters). From the fourth chapter to
the end is mainly prophecy, with practical exhortations and
consolations, however, interspersed, similar to those addressed to the
seven churches (the representatives of the universal Church of every
age), and so connecting the body of the book with its beginning, which
therefore forms its appropriate introduction. Three schools of
interpreters exist: (1) The Preterists, who hold that almost the whole
has been fulfilled. (2) The Historical Interpreters, who hold that it
comprises the history of the Church from John's time to the end of the
world, the seals being chronologically succeeded, by the
trumpets and the trumpets by the vials. (3) The Futurists, who consider
almost the whole as yet future, and to be fulfilled immediately before
Christ's second coming. The first theory was not held by any of the
earliest Fathers, and is only held now by Rationalists, who limit
John's vision to things within his own horizon, pagan Rome's
persecutions of Christians, and its consequently anticipated
destruction. The Futurist school is open to this great objection: it
would leave the Church of Christ unprovided with prophetical guidance
or support under her fiery trials for 1700 or 1800 years. Now God has
said, "Surely He will do nothing, but He revealeth His secrets unto His
servants the prophets"
(Am 3:7).
The Jews had a succession of prophets who guided them with the light of
prophecy: what their prophets were to them, that the apocalyptic
Scriptures have been, and are, to us.
ALFORD, following ISAAC
WILLIAMS, draws attention to the parallel
connection between the Apocalypse and Christ's discourse on the Mount
of Olives, recorded in
Mt 24:4-28.
The seals plainly bring us down to the second coming of Christ, just as
the trumpets also do (compare
Re 6:12-17; 8:1,
&c.; Re 11:15),
and as the vials also do
(Re 16:17):
all three run parallel, and end in the same point. Certain "catchwords"
(as WORDSWORTH calls them) connect the three
series of symbols together. They do not succeed one to the other in
historical and chronological sequence, but move side by side, the
subsequent series filling up in detail the same picture which the
preceding series had drawn in outline. So
VICTORINUS (on
Re 7:2),
the earliest commentator on the Apocalypse, says, "The order of the
things said is not to be regarded, since often the Holy Spirit, when He
has run to the end of the last time, again returns to the same times,
and supplies what He has less fully expressed." And PRIMASIUS [Commentary on the Apocalypse], "In the
trumpets he gives a description by a pleasing repetition, as is
his custom."
At the very beginning, John hastens, by anticipation (as was the
tendency of all the prophets), to the grand consummation.
Re 1:7,
"Behold, He cometh with clouds," &c.
Re 1:8, 17,
"I am the beginning and the ending . . . the first and
the last." So the seven epistles exhibit the same anticipation
of the end.
Re 3:12,
"Him that overcometh, I will write upon Him the name of my God, and the
name of the city of my God, which is new Jerusalem, which cometh down
out of heaven"; compare at the close,
Re 21:2.
So also
Re 2:28,
"I will give him the morning star"; compare at the close,
Re 22:16,
"I am the bright and morning star."
Again, the earthquake that ensues on the opening of the sixth
seal is one of the catchwords, that is, a link connecting
chronologically this sixth seal with the sixth trumpet
(Re 9:13; 11:13):
compare also the seventh vial,
Re 16:17, 18.
The concomitants of the opening of the sixth seal, it is plain, in no
full and exhaustive sense apply to any event, save the terrors which
shall overwhelm the ungodly just before the coming of the Judge.
Again, the beast out of the bottomless pit
(Re 11:7),
between the sixth and seventh trumpets, connects this series with the
section, twelfth through fourteenth chapters, concerning the Church and
her adversaries.
Again, the sealing of the 144,000 under the sixth seal connects this
seal with the section, the twelfth through fourteenth chapters.
Again, the loosing of the four winds by the four angels standing on the
four corners of the earth, under the sixth seal, answers to the loosing
of the four angels at the Euphrates, under the sixth
trumpet.
Moreover, links occur in the Apocalypse connecting it with the Old
Testament. For instance, the "mouth speaking great things"
(Da 7:8
Re 13:5),
connects the beast that blasphemes against God, and makes war
against the saints, with the little horn
(Da 7:21;
Re 13:6, 7),
or at last king, who, arising after the ten kings, shall speak
against the Most High, and wear out the saints
(Da 7:25);
also, compare the "forty-two months"
(Re 13:5),
or "a thousand two hundred and threescore days"
(Re 12:6),
with the "time, times, and the dividing of time," of
Da 7:25.
Moreover, the "forty-two months,"
Re 11:2,
answering to
Re 12:6; 13:5,
link together the period under the sixth trumpet to the section,
Re 12:1-14:20.
AUBERLEN observes, "The history of salvation is
mysteriously governed by holy numbers. They are the scaffolding of the
organic edifice. They are not merely outward indications of time, but
indications of nature and essence. Not only nature, but history, is
based in numbers. Scripture and antiquity put numbers as the
fundamental forms of things, where we put ideas." As number is the
regulator of the relations and proportions of the natural world, so
does it enter most frequently into the revelations of the Apocalypse,
which sets forth the harmonies of the supernatural, the immediately
Divine. Thus the most supernatural revelation leads us the farthest
into the natural, as was to be expected, seeing the God of nature and
of revelation is one. Seven is the number for perfection
(compare
Re 1:4; 4:5,
the seven Spirits before the throne; also,
Re 5:6,
the Lamb's seven horns and seven eyes). Thus the seven
churches represent the Church catholic in its totality. The
seven seals
(Re 5:1),
the seven trumpets
(Re 8:2),
and the seven vials
(Re 17:1),
are severally a complete series each in itself, fulfilling perfectly
the divine course of judgments. Three and a half implies a
number opposed to the divine (seven), but broken in itself, and which,
in the moment of its highest triumph, is overwhelmed by judgment and
utter ruin. Four is the number of the world's extension;
seven is the number of God's revelation in the world. In the
four beasts of Daniel
(Da 7:3)
there is a recognition of some power above them, at the same time that
there is a mimicry of the four cherubs of Ezekiel
(Eze 10:9),
the heavenly symbols of all creation in its due subjection to God
(Re 4:6-8).
So the four corners of the earth, the four winds, the four angels
loosed from the Euphrates, and Jerusalem lying "foursquare"
(Re 21:16),
represent world-wide extension. The sevenfoldness of the Spirits on the
part of God corresponds with the fourfold cherubim on the part of the
created. John, seeing more deeply into the essentially God-opposed
character of the world, presents to us, not the four beasts of
Daniel, but the seven heads of the beast, whereby it arrogates
to itself the sevenfold perfection of the Spirits of God;
at the same time that, with characteristic self-contradiction, it has
ten horns, the number peculiar to the world power. Its unjust
usurpation of the sacred number seven is marked by the addition
of an eighth to the seven heads, and also by the beast's
own number, six hundred sixty-six, which in units, tens, and hundreds,
verges upon, but falls short of, seven. The judgments on the
world are complete in six: after the sixth seal and the sixth
trumpet, there is a pause. When seven comes, there comes "the
kingdom of our Lord and His Christ." Six is the number of the world
given to judgment. Moreover, six is half of twelve, as
three and a half is the half of seven. Twelve is the
number of the Church: compare the twelve tribes of Israel, the
twelve stars on the woman's head
(Re 12:1),
the twelve gates of new Jerusalem
(Re 21:12, 21).
Six thus symbolizes the world broken, and without solid
foundation. Twice twelve is the number of the heavenly elders; twelve
times twelve thousand the number of the sealed elect
(Re 7:4):
the tree of life yields twelve manner of fruits. Doubtless, besides
this symbolic force, there is a special chronological meaning in the
numbers; but as yet, though a commanded subject of
investigation, they have received no solution which we can be sure is
the true one. They are intended to stimulate reverent inquiry, not to
gratify idle speculative curiosity; and when the event shall have been
fulfilled, they will show the divine wisdom of God, who ordered all
things in minutely harmonious relations, and left neither the times nor
the ways haphazard.
The arguments for the year-day theory are as follows:
Da 9:24,
"Seventy weeks are determined upon," where the Hebrew may be
seventy sevens; but MEDE observes, the
Hebrew word means always seven of days, and never seven
of years
(Le 12:5;
De 16:9, 10, 16).
Again, the number of years' wandering of the Israelites was made
to correspond to the number of days in which the spies searched
the land, namely, forty: compare "each day for a year,"
Nu 14:33, 34.
So in
Eze 4:5, 6,
"I have laid up on thee the years of their iniquity, according
to the number of the days, three hundred and ninety days
. . . forty days: I have appointed thee each day for a
year." John, in Revelation itself, uses days in a sense
which can hardly be literal.
Re 2:10,
"Ye shall have tribulation ten days": the persecution of ten
years recorded by EUSEBIUS seems to correspond
to it. In the year-day theory there is still quite enough of obscurity
to exercise the patience and probation of faith, for we cannot say
precisely when the 1260 years begin: so that this theory
is quite compatible with Christ's words, "Of that day and hour knoweth
no man"
[Mt 24:36;
Mr 13:32].
However, it is a difficulty in this theory that "a thousand years," in
Re 20:6, 7,
can hardly mean one thousand by three hundred sixty days, that is,
three hundred sixty thousand years. The first resurrection there must
be literal, even as
Re 20:5
must be taken literally, "the rest of the dead lived not again
until the thousand years were finished"
(Re 20:5).
To interpret the former spiritually would entail the need of
interpreting the latter so, which would be most improbable; for it
would imply that "the rest of the (spiritually) dead lived
not (spiritually)" until the end of the thousand years, and then
that they did come spiritually to life.
1Co 15:23,
"they that are Christ's at His coming," confirms the literal view.
CHAPTER 1
Re 1:1-20.
TITLE:
SOURCE AND
OBJECT OF
THIS
REVELATION:
BLESSING ON THE
READER AND
KEEPER OF
IT, AS THE
TIME
IS
NEAR:
INSCRIPTION TO THE
SEVEN
CHURCHES:
APOSTOLIC
GREETING:
KEYNOTE,
"BEHOLD
HE
COMETH" (Compare at the close,
Re 22:20,
"Surely I come quickly"):
INTRODUCTORY
VISION OF THE
SON OF
MAN IN
GLORY, AMIDST THE
SEVEN
CANDLESTICKS, WITH
SEVEN
STARS IN
HIS
RIGHT
HAND.
1. Revelation--an apocalypse or unveiling of those things
which had been veiled. A manifesto of the kingdom of Christ. The
travelling manual of the Church for the Gentile Christian times. Not a
detailed history of the future, but a representation of the
great epochs and chief powers in developing the kingdom of God in
relation to the world. The "Church-historical" view goes counter
to the great principle that Scripture interprets itself. Revelation is
to teach us to understand the times, not the times to interpret to us
the Apocalypse, although it is in the nature of the case that a reflex
influence is exerted here and is understood by the prudent
[AUBERLEN]. The book is in a series of parallel
groups, not in chronological succession. Still there is an organic
historical development of the kingdom of God. In this book all the
other books of the Bible end and meet: in it is the consummation of all
previous prophecy. Daniel foretells as to Christ and the Roman
destruction of Jerusalem, and the last Antichrist. But John's
Revelation fills up the intermediate period, and describes the
millennium and final state beyond Antichrist. Daniel, as a godly
statesman, views the history of God's people in relation to the four
world kingdoms. John, as an apostle, views history from the
Christian Church aspect. The term Apocalypse is applied
to no Old Testament book. Daniel is the nearest approach to it; but
what Daniel was told to seal and shut up till the time of the
end, John, now that the time is at hand
(Re 1:3),
is directed to reveal.
of Jesus Christ--coming from Him. Jesus Christ, not John
the writer, is the Author of the Apocalypse. Christ taught many things
before His departure; but those which were unsuitable for announcement
at that time He brought together into the Apocalypse [BENGEL]. Compare His promise,
Joh 15:15,
"All things that I have heard of My Father, I have made known unto
you"; also,
Joh 16:13,
"The Spirit of truth will show you things to come." The Gospels
and Acts are the books, respectively, of His first advent, in the
flesh, and in the Spirit; the Epistles are the inspired comment on
them. The Apocalypse is the book of His second advent and the events
preliminary to it.
which God gave unto him--The Father reveals Himself and His will
in, and by, His Son.
to show--The word recurs in
Re 22:6:
so entirely have the parts of Revelation reference to one another. It
is its peculiar excellence that it comprises in a perfect compendium
future things, and these widely differing: things close at hand, far
off, and between the two; great and little; destroying and saving;
repeated from old prophecies and new; long and short, and these
interwoven with one another, opposed and mutually agreeing; mutually
involving and evolving one another; so that in no book more than in
this would the addition, or taking away, of a single word or clause
(Re 22:18, 19),
have the effect of marring the sense of the context and the comparison
of passages together [BENGEL].
his servants--not merely to "His servant John," but to
all His servants (compare
Re 22:3).
shortly--Greek, "speedily"; literally, "in," or "with
speed." Compare "the time is at hand,"
Re 1:3; 22:6,
"shortly";
Re 22:7,
"Behold, I come quickly." Not that the things prophesied were
according to man's computation near; but this word "shortly" implies a
corrective of our estimate of worldly events and periods. Though a
"thousand years"
(Re 20:1-15)
at least are included, the time is declared to be at hand.
Lu 18:8,
"speedily." The Israelite Church hastened eagerly to the predicted end,
which premature eagerness prophecy restrains (compare
Da 9:1-27).
The Gentile Church needs to be reminded of the transitoriness of the
world (which it is apt to make its home) and the nearness of Christ's
advent. On the one hand Revelation says, "the time is at hand"; on the
other, the succession of seals, &c., show that many intermediate events
must first elapse.
he sent--Jesus Christ sent.
by his angel--joined with "sent." The angel does not come
forward to "signify" things to John until
Re 17:1; 19:9, 10.
Previous to that John receives information from others. Jesus Christ
opens the Revelation,
Re 1:10, 11; 4:1;
in
Re 6:1
one of the four living creatures acts as his informant; in
Re 7:13,
one of the elders; in
Re 10:8, 9,
the Lord and His angel who stood on the sea and earth. Only at the end
(Re 17:1)
does the one angel stand by Him (compare
Da 8:16; 9:21;
Zec 1:19).
2. bare record of--"testified the word of God" in this book.
Where we would say "testifies," the ancients in epistolary
communications use the past tense. The word of God constitutes his
testimony;
Re 1:3,
"the words of this prophecy."
the testimony of Jesus--"the Spirit of prophecy"
(Re 19:10).
and of all things that, &c.--The oldest manuscripts omit "and."
Translate, "whatsoever things he saw," in apposition with "the word of
God and the testimony of Jesus Christ."
3. he that readeth, and they that hear--namely, the public
reader in Church assemblies, and his hearers. In the first
instance, he by whom John sent the book from Patmos to the seven
churches, read it publicly: a usage most scriptural and profitable. A
special blessing attends him who reads or hears
the apocalyptic "prophecy" with a view to keeping the things
therein (as there is but one article to "they that hear and keep those
things," not two classes, but only one is meant: "they who not only
hear, but also keep those things,"
Ro 2:13);
even though he find not the key to its interpretation, he finds a
stimulus to faith, hope, and patient waiting for Christ. Note: the term
"prophecy" has relation to the human medium or prophet inspired,
here John: "Revelation" to the Divine Being who reveals His will, here
Jesus Christ. God gave the revelation to Jesus: He by His angel
revealed it to John, who was to make it known to the Church.
4. John--the apostle. For none but he (supposing the writer an
honest man) would thus sign himself nakedly without addition. As sole
survivor and representative of the apostles and eye-witnesses of the
Lord, he needed no designation save his name, to be recognized by his
readers.
seven churches--not that there were not more churches in that
region, but the number seven is fixed on as representing
totality. These seven represent the universal Church of
all times and places. See TRENCH'S [Commentary
on the Epistles to the Seven Churches in Asia] interesting note,
Re 1:20,
on the number seven. It is the covenant number, the sign
of God's covenant relation to mankind, and especially to the Church.
Thus, the seventh day, sabbath
(Ge 2:3;
Eze 20:12).
Circumcision, the sign of the covenant, after seven days
(Ge 17:12).
Sacrifices
(Nu 23:1; 14:29;
2Ch 29:21).
Compare also God's acts typical of His covenant
(Jos 6:4, 15, 16;
2Ki 5:10).
The feasts ordered by sevens of time
(De 15:1; 16:9, 13, 15).
It is a combination of three, the divine number (thus the
Trinity: the thrice Holy,
Isa 6:3;
the blessing,
Nu 6:24-26),
and four the number of the organized world in its extension
(thus the four elements, the four seasons, the
four winds, the four corners or quarters of the earth,
the four living creatures, emblems of redeemed creaturely life,
Re 4:6;
Eze 1:5, 6,
with four faces and four wings each; the four
beasts and four metals, representing the four world empires,
Da 2:32, 33; 7:3;
the four-sided Gospel designed for all quarters of the world;
the sheet tied at four corners,
Ac 10:11;
the four horns, the sum of the world's forces against the Church,
Zec 1:18).
In the Apocalypse, where God's covenant with His Church comes to its
consummation, appropriately the number seven recurs still more
frequently than elsewhere in Scripture.
Asia--Proconsular, governed by a Roman proconsul: consisting of
Phrygia, Mysia, Caria, and Lydia: the kingdom which Attalus III had
bequeathed to Rome.
Grace . . . peace--Paul's apostolical greeting. In his
Pastoral Epistles he inserts "mercy" in addition: so
2Jo 3.
him which is . . . was . . . is to come--a
periphrasis for the incommunicable name JEHOVAH,
the self-existing One, unchangeable. In Greek the
indeclinability of the designation here implies His unchangeableness.
Perhaps the reason why "He which is to come" is used, instead of "He
that shall be," is because the grand theme of Revelation is the Lord's
coming
(Re 1:7).
Still it is THE FATHER as
distinguished from "Jesus Christ"
(Re 1:5)
who is here meant. But so one are the Father and Son that the
designation, "which is to come," more immediately applicable to Christ,
is used here of the Father.
the seven Spirits which are before his throne--The oldest
manuscripts omit "are."
before--literally, "in the presence of." The Holy Spirit in His
sevenfold (that is, perfect, complete, and universal) energy.
Corresponding to "the seven churches." One in His own essence,
manifold in His gracious influences. The seven eyes resting on
the stone laid by Jehovah
(Re 5:6).
Four is the number of the creature world (compare the fourfold
cherubim); seven the number of God's revelation in the
world.
5. the faithful witness--of the truth concerning Himself and His
mission as Prophet, Priest, and King Saviour. "He was the faithful
witness, because all things that He heard of the Father He
faithfully made known to His disciples. Also, because He taught the way
of God in truth, and cared not for man, nor regarded the persons of
men. Also, because the truth which He taught in words He confirmed by
miracles. Also, because the testimony to Himself on the part of the
Father He denied not even in death. Lastly, because He will give true
testimony of the works of good and bad at the day of judgment"
[RICHARD OF ST.
VICTOR in TRENCH]. The
nominative in Greek standing in apposition to the genitive,
"Jesus Christ," gives majestic prominence to "the faithful witness."
the first-begotten of the dead--
(Col 1:18).
Lazarus rose, to die again. Christ rose to die no more. The image is
not as if the grave was the womb of His resurrection-birth [ALFORD]; but as
Ac 13:33;
Ro 1:4,
treat Christ's resurrection as the epoch and event which
fulfilled the Scripture,
Ps 2:7,
"This day (at the resurrection) have I begotten Thee." It was
then that His divine Sonship as the God-man was manifested and openly
attested by the Father. So our resurrection and our manifested sonship,
or generation, are connected. Hence "regeneration" is used of the
resurrection-state at the restitution of all things
(Mt 19:28).
the prince--or Ruler. The kingship of the world which the
tempter offered to Jesus on condition of doing homage to him, and so
shunning the cross, He has obtained by the cross. "The kings of the
earth" conspired against the Lord's Anointed
(Ps 2:2):
these He shall break in pieces
(Ps 2:9).
Those who are wise in time and kiss the Son shall bring their
glory unto Him at His manifestation as King of kings, after He has
destroyed His foes.
Unto him that loved us--The oldest manuscripts read the present,
". . . loveth us." It is His ever-continuing
character, He loveth us, and ever shall love us. His love rests
evermore on His people.
washed us--The two oldest manuscripts read, "freed
(loosed as from a bond) us": so ANDREAS and
PRIMASIUS. One very old manuscript,
Vulgate, and Coptic read as English Version,
perhaps drawn from
Re 7:4.
"Loosed us in (virtue of) His blood," being the
harder reading to understand, is less likely to have come from the
transcribers. The reference is thus to Greek, "lutron," the
ransom paid for our release
(Mt 20:28).
In favor of English Version reading is the usage whereby the
priests, before putting on the holy garments and ministering,
washed themselves: so spiritually believers, as priests
unto God, must first be washed in Christ's blood from every
stain before they can serve God aright now, or hereafter minister as
dispensers of blessing to the subject nations in the millennial
kingdom, or minister before God in heaven.
6. And hath--rather as Greek, "And (He) hath."
made us kings--The oldest manuscripts read, "a kingdom." One
oldest manuscript reads the dative, "for us." Another reads "us,"
accusative: so Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. This seems preferable, "He made us (to
be) a kingdom." So
Ex 19:6,
"a kingdom of priests";
1Pe 2:9,
"a royal priesthood." The saints shall constitute peculiarly a
kingdom of God, and shall themselves be kings
(Re 5:10).
They shall share His King-Priest throne in the millennial kingdom. The
emphasis thus falls more on the kingdom than on priests:
whereas in English Version reading it is equally distributed
between both. This book lays prominent stress on the saints'
kingdom. They are kings because they are priests: the priesthood
is the continuous ground and legitimization of their kingship; they are
kings in relation to man, priests in relation to God, serving Him day
and night in His temple
(Re 7:15; 5:10).
The priest-kings shall rule, not in an external mechanical manner, but
simply in virtue of what they are, by the power of attraction and
conviction overcoming the heart [AUBERLEN].
priests--who have pre-eminently the privilege of near access to
the king. David's sons were priests (Hebrew),
2Sa 8:18.
The distinction of priests and people, nearer and more remote
from God, shall cease; all shall have nearest access to Him. All
persons and things shall be holy to the Lord.
God and his Father--There is but one article to both in the
Greek, therefore it means, "Unto Him who is at once God and His
Father."
glory and dominion--Greek, "the glory and the
might." The fuller threefold doxology occurs,
Re 4:9, 11;
fourfold,
Re 5:13;
Jude 25;
sevenfold,
Re 7:12;
1Ch 29:11.
Doxology occupies the prominent place above, which prayer does below.
If we thought of God's glory first (as in the Lord's Prayer),
and gave the secondary place to our needs, we should please God and
gain our petitions better than we do.
for ever and ever--Greek, "unto the ages."
7. with clouds--Greek, "the clouds," namely, of
heaven. "A cloud received Him out of their sight" at His ascension
(Ac 1:9).
His ascension corresponds to the manner of His coming again
(Ac 1:11).
Clouds are the symbols of wrath to sinners.
every eye--His coming shall therefore be a personal, visible
appearing.
shall see--It is because they do not now see Him, they
will not believe. Contrast
Joh 20:29.
they also--they in particular; "whosoever."
Primarily, at His pre-millennial advent the Jews, who shall
"look upon Him whom they have pierced," and mourn in repentance,
and say, "Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord."
Secondarily, and here chiefly, at the general judgment all the
ungodly, not only those who actually pierced Him, but those who did so
by their sins, shall look with trembling upon Him. John is the only one
of the Evangelists who records the piercing of Christ's side.
This allusion identifies him as the author of the Apocalypse. The
reality of Christ's humanity and His death is proved by His having been
pierced; and the water and blood from His side were the
antitype to the Levitical waters of cleansing and blood offerings.
all kindreds . . . shall wail--all the unconverted at
the general judgment; and especially at His pre-millennial advent, the
Antichristian confederacy
(Zec 12:3-6, 9; 14:1-4;
Mt 24:30).
Greek, "all the tribes of the land," or "the
earth." See the limitation to "all,"
Re 13:8.
Even the godly while rejoicing in His love shall feel penitential
sorrow at their sins, which shall all be manifested at the general
judgment.
because of--Greek, "at," or "in regard to
Him."
Even so, Amen--Gods seal of His own word; to which corresponds
the believer's prayer,
Re 22:20.
The "even so" is Greek; "Amen" is Hebrew. To both
Gentiles and Jews His promises and threats are unchangeable.
8. Greek, "I am the Alpha and the Omega."
The first and last letters of the alphabet. God in Christ comprises all
that goes between, as well as the first and last.
the beginning and the ending--omitted in the oldest manuscripts,
though found in Vulgate and Coptic. Transcribers probably
inserted the clause from
Re 21:6.
In Christ, Genesis, the Alpha of the Old Testament, and Revelation, the
Omega of the New Testament, meet together: the last book presenting to
us man and God reconciled in Paradise, as the first book presented man
at the beginning innocent and in God's favor in Paradise. Accomplishing
finally what I begin. Always the same; before the dragon,
the beast, false prophet, and all foes. An anticipatory consolation to
the saints under the coming trials of the Church.
the Lord--The oldest manuscripts read "the Lord God."
Almighty--Hebrew, "Shaddai," and "Jehovah
Sabaoth," that is, "of hosts"; commanding all the hosts or powers
in heaven and earth, so able to overcome all His Church's foes. It
occurs often in Revelation, but nowhere else in the New Testament save
2Co 6:18,
a quotation from Isaiah.
9. I John--So "I Daniel"
(Da 7:28; 9:2; 10:2).
One of the many features of resemblance between the Old Testament and
the New Testament apocalyptic seers. No other Scripture writer uses the
phrase.
also--as well as being an apostle. The oldest manuscripts omit
"also." In his Gospel and Epistles he makes no mention of his
name, though describing himself as "the disciple whom Jesus
loved." Here, with similar humility, though naming himself, he does not
mention his apostleship.
companion--Greek, "fellow partaker in the tribulation."
Tribulation is the necessary precursor of the kingdom," therefore "the"
is prefixed. This must be borne with "patient endurance." The oldest
manuscripts omit "in the" before "kingdom." All three are inseparable:
the tribulation, kingdom and endurance.
patience--Translate, "endurance." "Persevering, enduring
continuance"
(Ac 14:22);
"the queen of the graces (virtues)" [CHRYSOSTOM].
of, &c.--The oldest manuscripts read "IN
Jesus," or "Jesus Christ." It is IN Him that
believers have the right to the kingdom, and the spiritual
strength to enable them to endure patiently for it.
was--Greek, "came to be."
in . . . Patmos--now Patmo or Palmosa. See
Introduction
on this island, and John's exile to it under Domitian, from which he
was released under Nerva. Restricted to a small spot on earth, he is
permitted to penetrate the wide realms of heaven and its secrets. Thus
John drank of Christ's cup, and was baptized with His baptism
(Mt 20:22).
for--Greek, "for the sake of," "on account of"; so,
"because of the word of God and . . . testimony." Two
oldest manuscripts omit the second "for"; thus "the Word of God" and
"testimony of Jesus" are the more closely joined. Two oldest
manuscripts omit "Christ." The Apocalypse has been always appreciated
most by the Church in adversity. Thus the Asiatic Church from the
flourishing times of Constantine less estimated it. The African Church
being more exposed to the cross always made much of it [BENGEL].
10. I was--Greek, "I came to be"; "I became."
in the Spirit--in a state of ecstasy; the outer world being shut
out, and the inner and higher life or spirit being taken full
possession of by God's Spirit, so that an immediate connection with the
invisible world is established. While the prophet "speaks" in
the Spirit, the apocalyptic seer is in the Spirit in his whole
person. The spirit only (that which connects us with God and the
invisible world) is active, or rather recipient, in the apocalyptic
state. With Christ this being "in the Spirit" was not the exception,
but His continual state.
on the Lord's day--Though forcibly detained from Church
communion with the brethren in the sanctuary on the Lord's day, the
weekly commemoration of the resurrection, John was holding spiritual
communion with them. This is the earliest mention of the term,
"the Lord's day." But the consecration of the day to worship,
almsgiving, and the Lord's Supper, is implied in
Ac 20:7;
1Co 16:2;
compare
Joh 20:19-26.
The name corresponds to "the Lord's Supper,"
1Co 11:20.
IGNATIUS seems to allude to "the Lord's day"
[Epistle to the Magnesians, 9], and IRENÆUS [Quæst ad Orthod., 115] (in
JUSTIN MARTYR).
JUSTIN MARTYR
[Apology, 2.98], &c., "On Sunday we all hold our joint meeting;
for the first day is that on which God, having removed darkness and
chaos, made the world, and Jesus Christ our Saviour rose from the dead.
On the day before Saturday they crucified Him; and on the day after
Saturday, which is Sunday, having appeared to His apostles and
disciples, He taught these things." To the Lord's day PLINY doubtless refers [Epistles, Book X., p. 97],
"The Christians on a fixed day before dawn meet and sing a hymn
to Christ as God," &c. TERTULLIAN [The
Chaplet, 3], "On the Lord's day we deem it wrong to fast." MELITO, bishop of Sardis (second century), wrote a book
on the Lord's day [EUSEBIUS 4.26]. Also,
DIONYSIUS OF CORINTH, in
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 4.23,8].
CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA
[Miscellanies, 5. and 7.12]; ORIGEN
[Against Celsus, 8. 22]. The theory that the day of Christ's
second coming is meant, is untenable. "The day of the Lord" is
different in the Greek from "the Lord's (an adjective) day,"
which latter in the ancient Church always designates our Sunday, though
it is not impossible that the two shall coincide (at least in some
parts of the earth), whence a tradition is mentioned in JEROME [Commentary on Matthew, 25], that the
Lord's coming was expected especially on the Paschal Lord's day. The
visions of the Apocalypse, the seals, trumpets, and vials, &c., are
grouped in sevens, and naturally begin on the first day of the
seven, the birthday of the Church, whose future they set forth
[WORDSWORTH].
great voice--summoning solemn attention; Greek order, "I
heard a voice behind me great (loud) as (that) of a trumpet." The
trumpet summoned to religious feasts, and accompanies God's revelations
of Himself.
11. I am Alpha and Omega, the first and the last; and--The
oldest manuscripts, omit all this clause.
write in a book--To this book, having such an origin, and
to the other books of Holy Scripture, who is there that gives the
weight which their importance demands, preferring them to the many
books of the world? [BENGEL].
seven churches--As there were many other churches in Proconsular
Asia (for example, Miletus, Magnesia, Tralles), besides the seven
specified, doubtless the number seven is fixed upon because of
its mystical signification, expressing totality and
universality. The words, "which are in Asia" are rejected by the
oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, CYPRIAN,
Vulgate, and Syriac; Coptic alone supports them of old
authorities. These seven are representative churches; and, as a complex
whole, ideally complete, embody the chief spiritual characteristics of
the Church, whether as faithful or unfaithful, in all ages. The
churches selected are not taken at random, but have a many-sided
completeness. Thus, on one side we have Smyrna, a Church exposed to
persecutions unto death; on the other Sardis, having a high name
for spiritual life and yet dead. Again, Laodicea, in its own
estimate rich and having need of nothing, with ample
talents, yet lukewarm in Christ's cause; on the other hand,
Philadelphia, with but a little strength, yet keeping
Christ's word and having an open door of usefulness set
before it by Christ Himself. Again, Ephesus, intolerant of
evil and of false apostles, yet having left its first
love; on the other hand, Thyatira, abounding in works, love,
service, and faith, yet suffering the false
prophetess to seduce many. In another aspect, Ephesus in
conflict with false freedom, that is fleshly licentiousness (the
Nicolaitanes); so also Pergamos in conflict with Balaam-like tempters
to fornication and idol-meats; and on the other side,
Philadelphia in conflict with the Jewish synagogue, that is, legal
bondage. Finally, Sardis and Laodicea without any active opposition to
call forth their spiritual energies; a dangerous position, considering
man's natural indolence. In the historic scheme of interpretation,
which seems fanciful, Ephesus (meaning "the beloved" or "desired"
[STIER]) represents the waning period of the
apostolic age. Smyrna ("myrrh"), bitter suffering, yet sweet and costly
perfume, the martyr period of the Decian and Diocletian age. Pergamos
(a "castle" or "tower"), the Church possessing earthly power and
decreasing spirituality from Constantine's time until the seventh
century. Thyatira ("unwearied about sacrifices"), the Papal Church in
the first half of the Middle Ages; like "Jezebel," keen about its
so-called sacrifice of the mass, and slaying the prophets and
witnesses of God. Sardis, from the close of the twelfth century to the
Reformation. Philadelphia ("brotherly love"), the first century of the
Reformation. Laodicea, the Reformed Church after its first zeal had
become lukewarm.
12. see the voice--that is, ascertain whence the
voice came; to see who was it from whom the voice
proceeded.
that--Greek, "of what kind it was which." The
voice is that of God the Father, as at Christ's baptism and
transfiguration, so here in presenting Christ as our High Priest.
spake--The oldest manuscripts, versions, and Fathers read, "was
speaking."
being--"having turned."
seven . . . candlesticks--"lamp-stands"
[KELLY]. The stand holding the lamp. In
Ex 25:31, 32,
the seven are united in ONE candlestick or
lamp-stand, that is, six arms and a central shaft; so
Zec 4:2, 11.
Here the seven are separate candlesticks, typifying, as that
one, the entire Church, but now no longer as the Jewish Church
(represented by the one sevenfold candlestick) restricted to one
outward unity and one place; the several churches are mutually
independent as to external ceremonies and government (provided all
things are done to edification, and schisms or needless separations are
avoided), yet one in the unity of the Spirit and the Headship of
Christ. The candlestick is not light, but the bearer of light, holding
it forth to give light around. The light is the Lord's, not the
Church's; from Him she receives it. She is to be a light-bearer to His
glory. The candlestick stood in the holy place, the type of the Church
on earth, as the holiest place was type of the Church in heaven. The
holy place's only light was derived from the candlestick, daylight
being excluded; so the Lord God is the Church's only light; hers is the
light of grace, not nature. "Golden" symbolizes at once the greatest
preciousness and sacredness; so that in the Zend
Avesta, "golden" is synonymous with heavenly or divine [TRENCH].
13. His glorified form as man could be recognized by John, who
had seen it at the Transfiguration.
in the midst--implying Christ's continual presence and ceaseless
activity in the midst of His people on earth. In
Re 4:1-3,
when He appears in heaven, His insignia undergo a corresponding
change yet even there the rainbow reminds us of His everlasting
covenant with them.
seven--omitted in two of the oldest manuscripts, but supported
by one.
Son of man--The form which John had seen enduring the agony of
Gethsemane, and the shame and anguish of Calvary, he now sees
glorified. His glory (as Son of man, not merely Son of
God) is the result of His humiliation as Son of man.
down to the foot--a mark of high rank. The garment and girdle
seem to be emblems of His priesthood. Compare
Ex 28:2, 4, 31;
Septuagint. Aaron's robe and girdle were "for glory and beauty,"
and combined the insignia of royalty and priesthood, the
characteristics of Christ's antitypical priesthood "after the order of
Melchisedec." His being in the midst of the candlesticks (only
seen in the temple), shows that it is as a king-priest He
is so attired. This priesthood He has exercised ever since His
ascension; and, therefore He here wears its emblems. As Aaron wore
these insignia when He came forth from the sanctuary to bless the
people
(Le 16:4, 23, 24,
the chetoneth, or holy linen coat), so when Christ shall come
again, He shall appear in the similar attire of "beauty and glory"
(Isa 4:2,
Margin). The angels are attired somewhat like their Lord
(Re 15:6).
The ordinary girding for one actively engaged, was at the loins;
but JOSEPHUS [Antiquities,3.7.2], expressly
tells us that the Levitical priests were girt higher up, about the
breasts or paps, appropriate to calm, majestic movement. The
girdle bracing the frame together, symbolizes collected powers.
Righteousness and faithfulness are Christ's girdle. The
high priest's girdle was only interwoven with gold, but Christ's is all
of gold; the antitype exceeds the type.
14.--Greek, "But," or "And."
like wool--Greek, "like white wool." The
color is the point of comparison; signifying purity and
glory. (So in
Isa 1:18).
Not age, for hoary hairs are the sign of decay.
eyes . . . as . . . flame--all-searching and
penetrating like fire: at the same time, also, implying
consuming indignation against sin, especially at His coming "in
flaming fire, taking vengeance" on all the ungodly, which is confirmed
as the meaning here, by
Re 19:11, 12.
15. fine brass--Greek, "chalcolibanus," derived by
some from two Greek words, "brass" and "frankincense"; derived
by BOCHART from Greek, "chalcos,"
"brass," and Hebrew, "libbeen," "to whiten"; hence,
"brass," which in the furnace has reached a white heat. Thus it
answers to "burnished (flashing, or glowing) brass,"
Eze 1:7;
Re 10:1,
"His feet as pillars of fire." Translate, "Glowing brass,
as if they had been made fiery (red-hot) in a furnace." The feet of the
priests were bare in ministering in the sanctuary. So our great High
Priest here.
voice as . . . many waters--
(Eze 43:2);
in
Da 10:6,
it is "like the voice of a multitude." As the Bridegroom's
voice, so the bride's,
Re 14:2; 19:6;
Eze 1:24,
the cherubim, or redeemed creation. His voice, however, is here
regarded in its terribleness to His foes. Contrast
So 2:8; 5:2,
with which compare
Re 3:20.
16. he had--Greek, "having." John takes up the
description from time to time, irrespective of the construction,
with separate strokes of the pencil [ALFORD].
in . . . right hand seven stars--
(Re 1:20;
Re 2:1; 3:1).
He holds them as a star-studded "crown of glory," or "royal diadem," in
His hand: so
Isa 62:3.
He is their Possessor and Upholder.
out of . . . mouth went--Greek, "going forth";
not wielded in the hand. His WORD is omnipotent in
executing His will in punishing sinners. It is the sword of His Spirit.
Reproof and punishment, rather than its converting winning power, is
the prominent point. Still, as He encourages the churches, as well as
threatens, the former quality of the Word is not excluded. Its
two edges (back and front) may allude to its double efficacy,
condemning some, converting others. TERTULLIAN
[Epistle against Judaizers], takes them of the Old and the
New Testaments. RICHARD OF
ST. VICTOR, "the Old
Testament cutting externally our carnal, the New Testament
internally, our spiritual sins."
sword--Greek, "romphaia," the Thracian long and
heavy broad sword: six times in Revelation, once only elsewhere in New
Testament, namely,
Lu 2:35.
sun . . . in his strength--in unclouded power. So
shall the righteous shine, reflecting the image of the Sun of
righteousness. TRENCH notices that this
description, sublime as a purely mental conception, would be
intolerable if we were to give it an outward form. With the Greeks,
æsthecial taste was the first consideration, to which all others
must give way. With the Hebrews, truth and the full representation
ideally of the religious reality were the paramount consideration, that
representation being designed not to be outwardly embodied, but to
remain a purely mental conception. This exalting of the essence above
the form marks their deeper religious earnestness.
17. So fallen is man that God's manifestation of His glorious
presence overwhelms him.
laid his right hand upon me--So the same Lord Jesus did at the
Transfiguration to the three prostrate disciples, of whom John was one,
saying, Be not afraid. The "touch" of His hand, as of old, imparted
strength.
unto me--omitted in the oldest manuscripts.
the first . . . the last--
(Isa 41:4; 44:6; 48:12).
From eternity, and enduring to eternity: "the First by creation, the
Last by retribution: the First, because before Me there was no God
formed; the Last, because after Me there shall be no other: the First,
because from Me are all things; the Last, because to Me all things
return" [RICHARD OF ST.
VICTOR].
18. Translate as Greek, "And THE
LIVING ONE": connected with
last sentence,
Re 1:17.
and was--Greek, "and (yet) I became."
alive for evermore--Greek, "living unto the ages of
ages": not merely "I live," but I have life, and am the source
of it to My people. "To Him belongs absolute being, as
contrasted with the relative being of the creature; others may
share, He only hath immortality: being in essence, not
by mere participation, immortal" [THEODORET in
TRENCH]. One oldest manuscript, with English
Version, reads Amen." Two others, and most of the oldest versions
and Fathers, omit it. His having passed through death as one of us, and
now living in the infinite plenitude of life, reassures His people,
since through Him death is the gate of resurrection to eternal life.
have . . . keys of hell--Greek, "Hades";
Hebrew, "Sheol." "Hell" in the sense, the place of
torment, answers to a different Greek word, namely,
Gehenna. I can release from the unseen world of spirits
and from DEATH whom I will. The oldest
manuscripts read by transposition, "Death and Hades," or Hell." It is
death (which came in by sin, robbing man of his immortal birthright,
Ro 5:12)
that peoples Hades, and therefore should stand first in order.
Keys are emblems of authority, opening and shutting at will "the
gates of Hades"
(Ps 9:13, 14;
Isa 38:10;
Mt 16:18).
19. The oldest manuscripts read, "Write therefore"
(inasmuch as I, "the First and Last," have the keys of death, and
vouchsafe to thee this vision for the comfort and warning of the
Church).
things which are--"the things which thou hast seen" are those
narrated in this chapter (compare
Re 1:11).
"The things which are" imply the present state of things in the
churches when John was writing, as represented in the second and third
chapters. "The things which shall be hereafter," the things
symbolically represented concerning the future history of the fourth
through twenty-second chapters. ALFORD
translates, "What things they signify"; but the
antithesis of the next clause forbids this, "the things which shall be
hereafter," Greek, "which are about to come to pass." The
plural (Greek) "are," instead of the usual Greek
construction singular, is owing to churches and
persons being meant by things" in the clause, "the things which
are."
20. in--Greek, "upon My right hand."
the mystery . . . candlesticks--in apposition to, and
explaining, "the things which thou hast seen," governed by "Write."
Mystery signifies the hidden truth, veiled under this symbol,
and now revealed; its correlative is revelation. Stars symbolize
lordship
(Nu 24:17;
compare
Da 12:3,
of faithful teachers;
Re 8:10; 12:4;
Jude 13).
angels--not as ALFORD, from
ORIGEN [Homily 13 on Luke, and Homily
20 on Numbers], the guardian angels of the churches, just as
individuals have their guardian angels. For how could heavenly angels
be charged with the delinquencies laid here to the charge of these
angels? Then, if a human angel be meant (as the Old Testament analogy
favors,
Hag 1:13,
"the Lord's Messenger in the Lord's message";
Mal 2:7; 3:1),
the bishop, or superintendent pastor, must be the angel. For
whereas there were many presbyters in each of the larger churches (as
for example, Ephesus, Smyrna, &c.), there was but one angel,
whom, moreover, the Chief Shepherd and Bishop of souls holds
responsible for the spiritual state of the Church under him. The term
angel, designating an office, is, in accordance with the
enigmatic symbolism of this book, transferred from the heavenly to the
earthly superior ministers of Jehovah; reminding them that, like the
heavenly angels above, they below should fulfil God's mission
zealously, promptly and efficiently. "Thy will be done on earth, as it
is in heaven!"
CHAPTER 2
Re 2:1-29.
EPISTLES TO
EPHESUS,
SMYRNA,
PERGAMOS,
THYATIRA.
Each of the seven epistles in this and the third chapter, commences
with, "I know thy works." Each contains a promise from Christ, "To him
that overcometh." Each ends with, "He that hath an ear, let him hear
what the Spirit saith unto the churches." The title of our Lord in each
case accords with the nature of the address, and is mainly taken from
the imagery of the vision,
Re 1:12-16.
Each address has a threat or a promise, and most of the addresses have
both. Their order seems to be ecclesiastical, civil, and geographical:
Ephesus first, as being the Asiatic metropolis (termed "the light of
Asia," and "first city of Asia"), the nearest to Patmos, where John
received the epistle to the seven churches, and also as being that
Church with which John was especially connected; then the churches on
the west coast of Asia; then those in the interior. Smyrna and
Philadelphia alone receive unmixed praise. Sardis and Laodicea receive
almost solely censure. In Ephesus, Pergamos, and Thyatira, there are
some things to praise, others to condemn, the latter element
preponderating in one case (Ephesus), the former in the two others
(Pergamos and Thyatira). Thus the main characteristics of the different
states of different churches, in all times and places, are portrayed,
and they are suitably encouraged or warned.
1. Ephesus--famed for the temple of Diana, one of the seven
wonders of the world. For three years Paul labored there. He
subsequently ordained Timothy superintending overseer or bishop there:
probably his charge was but of a temporary nature. John, towards the
close of his life, took it as the center from which he superintended
the province.
holdeth--Greek, "holdeth fast," as in
Re 2:25;
Re 3:11;
compare
Joh 10:28, 29.
The title of Christ here as "holding fast the seven stars (from
Re 1:16:
only that, for having is substituted holding fast in His
grasp), and walking in the midst of the seven candlesticks," accords
with the beginning of His address to the seven churches
representing the universal Church. Walking expresses His
unwearied activity in the Church, guarding her from internal and
external evils, as the high priest moved to and fro in the
sanctuary.
2. I know thy works--expressing His omniscience. Not merely "thy
professions, desires, good resolutions"
(Re 14:13,
end).
thy labour--Two oldest manuscripts omit "thy"; one supports it.
The Greek means "labor unto weariness."
patience--persevering endurance.
bear--evil men are a burden which the Ephesian
Church regarded as intolerable. We are to "bear (the same
Greek,
Ga 6:2)
one another's burdens" in the case of weak brethren; but not to
bear false brethren.
tried--by experiment; not the Greek for "test," as
1Jo 4:1.
The apostolical churches had the miraculous gift of discerning
spirits. Compare
Ac 20:28-30,
wherein Paul presciently warned the Ephesian elders of the
coming false teachers, as also in writing to Timothy at Ephesus.
TERTULLIAN [On Baptism, 17], and
JEROME [On Illustrious Men, in Lucca 7],
record of John, that when a writing, professing to be a canonical
history of the acts of Paul, had been composed by a presbyter of
Ephesus, John convicted the author and condemned the work. So on one
occasion he would not remain under the same roof with Cerinthus the
heretic.
say they are apostles--probably Judaizers.
IGNATIUS [Epistle to the Ephesians, 6],
says subsequently, "Onesimus praises exceedingly your good discipline
that no heresy dwells among you"; and [Epistle to the Ephesians,
9], "Ye did not permit those having evil doctrine to sow their seed
among you, but closed your ears."
3. borne . . . patience--The oldest manuscripts
transpose these words. Then translate as Greek, "persevering
endurance . . . borne." "Thou hast borne" My reproach, but
"thou canst not bear the evil"
(Re 2:2).
A beautiful antithesis.
and . . . hast laboured, and hast not fainted--The two
oldest manuscripts and oldest versions read, "and . . . hast
not labored," omitting "and hast fainted." The difficulty which
transcribers by English Version reading tried to obviate, was
the seeming contradiction, "I know thy labor . . . and
thou hast not labored." But what is meant is, "Thou hast not
been wearied out with labor."
4. somewhat . . . because--Translate, "I have against
thee (this) that," &c. It is not a mere somewhat"; it is
everything. How characteristic of our gracious Lord, that He puts
foremost all He can find to approve, and only after this notes the
shortcomings!
left thy first love--to Christ. Compare
1Ti 5:12,
"cast off their first faith." See the Ephesians' first love,
Eph 1:15.
This epistle was written under Domitian, when thirty years had elapsed
since Paul had written his Epistle to them. Their warmth of love had
given place to a lifeless orthodoxy. Compare Paul's view of faith so
called without love,
1Co 13:2.
5. whence--from what a height.
do the first works--the works which flowed from thy
first love. Not merely "feel thy first feelings," but do works
flowing from the same principle as formerly, "faith which worketh by
love."
I will come--Greek, "I am coming" in special judgment on
thee.
quickly--omitted in two oldest manuscripts, Vulgate and
Coptic versions: supported by one oldest manuscript.
remove thy candlestick out of his place--I will take away the
Church from Ephesus and remove it elsewhere. "It is removal of the
candlestick, not extinction of the candle, which is threatened here;
judgment for some, but that very judgment the occasion of mercy for
others. So it has been. The seat of the Church has been changed, but
the Church itself survives. What the East has lost, the West has
gained. One who lately visited Ephesus found only three Christians
there, and these so ignorant as scarcely to have heard the names of St.
Paul or St. John" [TRENCH].
6. But--How graciously, after necessary censure, He returns to
praise for our consolation, and as an example to us, that we
would show, when we reprove, we have more pleasure in praising than in
fault-finding.
hatest the deeds--We should hate men's evil deeds, not
hate the men themselves.
Nicolaitanes--IRENÆUS [Against
Heresies, 1.26.3] and TERTULLIAN
[Prescription against Heretics, 46] make these followers of
Nicolas, one of the seven (honorably mentioned,
Ac 6:3, 5).
They (CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA
[Miscellanies, 2.20 3.4] and EPIPHANIUS
[Heresies, 25]) evidently confound the latter Gnostic
Nicolaitanes, or followers of one Nicolaos, with those of Revelation.
MICHAELIS' view is probable: Nicolaos
(conqueror of the people) is the Greek version of Balaam,
from Hebrew "Belang Am," "Destroyer of the people."
Revelation abounds in such duplicate Hebrew and Greek
names: as Apollyon, Abaddon: Devil, Satan: Yea (Greek,
"Nai"), Amen. The name, like other names, Egypt, Babylon, Sodom,
is symbolic. Compare
Re 2:14, 15,
which shows the true sense of Nicolaitanes; they are not a sect, but
professing Christians who, like Balaam of old. tried to introduce into
the Church a false freedom, that is, licentiousness; this was a
reaction in the opposite direction from Judaism, the first danger to
the Church combated in the council of Jerusalem, and by Paul in the
Epistle to Galatians. These symbolical Nicolaitanes, or followers of
Balaam, abused Paul's doctrine of the grace of God into a plea for
lasciviousness
(2Pe 2:15, 16, 19;
Jude 4, 11
who both describe the same sort of seducers as followers of
Balaam). The difficulty that they should appropriate a name
branded with infamy in Scripture is met by TRENCH:
The Antinomian Gnostics were so opposed to John as a Judaizing apostle
that they would assume as a name of chiefest honor one which John
branded with dishonor.
7. He that hath an ear--This clause precedes the promise in the
first three addresses, succeeds it in the last four. Thus the promises
are enclosed on both sides with the precept urging the deepest
attention as to the most momentous truths. Every man "hath an ear"
naturally, but he alone will be able to hear spiritually to whom God
has given "the hearing ear"; whose "ear God hath wakened" and "opened."
Compare "Faith, the ears of the soul" [CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA].
the Spirit saith--What Christ saith, the Spirit
saith; so one are the Second and Third Persons.
unto the churches--not merely to the particular, but to the
universal Church.
overcometh--In John's Gospel
(Joh 16:33)
and First Epistle
(1Jo 2:13, 14; 5:4, 5)
an object follows, namely, "the world," "the wicked one." Here, where
the final issue is spoken of, the conqueror is named absolutely.
Paul uses a similar image
(1Co 9:24, 25;
2Ti 2:5;
but not the same as John's phrase, except
Ro 12:21).
will I give--as the Judge. The tree of life in Paradise, lost by
the fall, is restored by the Redeemer. Allusions to it occur in
Pr 3:18; 11:30; 13:12; 15:4,
and prophetically,
Re 22:2, 14;
Eze 47:12;
compare
Joh 6:51.
It is interesting to note how closely these introductory addresses are
linked to the body of Revelation. Thus, the tree of life here,
with
Re 22:1;
deliverance from the second death
(Re 2:11),
with
Re 20:14; 21:8;
the new name
(Re 2:17),
with
Re 14:1;
power over the nations, with
Re 20:4;
the morning star
(Re 2:28),
with
Re 22:16;
the white raiment
(Re 3:5),
with
Re 4:4; 16:15;
the name in the book of life
(Re 3:5),
with
Re 13:8; 20:15;
the new Jerusalem and its citizenship
(Re 3:12),
with
Re 21:10.
give . . . tree of life--The thing promised
corresponds to the kind of faithfulness manifested. They who refrain
from Nicolaitane indulgences
(Re 2:6)
and idol-meats
(Re 2:14, 15),
shall eat of meat infinitely superior, namely, the fruit of the tree of
life, and the hidden manna
(Re 2:17).
in the midst of the paradise--The oldest manuscripts omit "the
midst of." In
Ge 2:9
these words are appropriate, for there were other trees in the
garden, but not in the midst of it. Here the tree of life
is simply in the paradise, for no other tree is mentioned in it;
in
Re 22:2
the tree of life is "in the midst of the street of Jerusalem";
from this the clause was inserted here. Paradise (a Persian, or
else Semitic word), originally used of any garden of delight; then
specially of Eden; then the temporary abode of separate souls in bliss;
then "the Paradise of God," the third heaven, the immediate
presence of God.
of God--
(Eze 28:13).
One oldest manuscript, with Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic,
and CYPRIAN, read, "MY God,"
as in
Re 3:12.
So Christ calls God, "My God and your God"
(Joh 20:17;
compare
Eph 1:17).
God is our God, in virtue of being peculiarly Christ's
God. The main bliss of Paradise is that it is the Paradise of
God; God Himself dwelling there
(Re 21:3).
8. Smyrna--in Ionia, a little to the north of Ephesus. POLYCARP, martyred in A.D. 168,
eighty-six years after his conversion, was bishop, and probably "the
angel of the Church in Smyrna" meant here. The allusions to
persecutions and faithfulness unto death accord with this view.
IGNATIUS [The Martyrdom of Ignatius 3], on
his way to martyrdom in Rome, wrote to POLYCARP,
then (A.D. 108) bishop of Smyrna; if his bishopric
commenced ten or twelve years earlier, the dates will harmonize.
TERTULLIAN [The Prescription against
Heretics, 32], and IRENÆUS, who had
talked with POLYCARP in youth, tell us
POLYCARP was consecrated bishop of Smyrna by St.
John.
the first . . . the last . . . was dead
. . . is alive--The attributes of Christ most calculated
to comfort the Church of Smyrna under its persecutions; resumed from
Re 1:17, 18.
As death was to Him but the gate to life eternal, so it is to be to
them
(Re 2:10, 11).
9. thy works, and--omitted in two oldest manuscripts,
Vulgate, and Coptic. Supported by one oldest manuscript.
tribulation--owing to persecution.
poverty--owing to "the spoiling of their goods."
but thou art rich--in grace. Contrast Laodicea, rich in
the world's eyes and her own, poor before God. "There are both
poor rich-men, and rich poor-men in God's sight"
[TRENCH].
blasphemy of them--blasphemous calumny of thee on the part of
(or arising from) them.
say they are Jews, and are not--Jews by national descent, but
not spiritually of "the true circumcision." The Jews blaspheme Christ
as "the hanged one." As elsewhere, so at Smyrna they bitterly opposed
Christianity; and at POLYCARP'S martyrdom they
joined the heathens in clamoring for his being cast to the lions; and
when there was an obstacle to this, for his being burnt alive; and with
their own hands they carried logs for the pile.
synagogue of Satan--Only once is the term "synagogue" in the New
Testament used of the Christian assembly, and that by the apostle who
longest maintained the union of the Church and Jewish Synagogue. As the
Jews more and more opposed Christianity, and it more and more rooted
itself in the Gentile world, the term "synagogue" was left altogether
to the former, and Christians appropriated exclusively the honorable
term "Church"; contrast an earlier time when the Jewish theocracy is
called "the Church in the wilderness." Compare
Nu 16:3; 20:4,
"congregation of the Lord." Even in
Jas 2:2
it is "your (not the Lord's) assembly." The Jews,
who might have been "the Church of God," had now, by their opposition
and unbelief, become the synagogue of Satan. So "the throne of Satan"
(Re 2:13)
represents the heathens' opposition to Christianity; "the depths
of Satan"
(Re 2:24),
the opposition of heretics.
10. Fear none, &c.--the oldest manuscripts read, "Fear
not those things," &c. "The Captain of our salvation never keeps
back what those who faithfully witness for Him may have to bear for His
name's sake; never entices recruits by the promise they shall find all
things easy and pleasant there" [TRENCH].
devil--"the accuser." He acted, through Jewish accusers
against Christ and His people. The conflict of the latter was not with
mere flesh and blood, but with the rulers of the darkness of this
world.
tried--with temptation by "the devil." The same event is
often both a temptation from the devil, and a trial from
God--God sifting and winnowing the man to separate his chaff from his
wheat, the devil sifting him in the hope that nothing but chaff will be
found in him [TRENCH].
ten days--not the ten persecutions from Nero to Diocletian.
LYRA explains ten years on the year-day
principle. The shortness of the duration of the persecution is
evidently made the ground of consolation. The time of trial shall be
short, the duration of your joy shall be for ever. Compare the use of
"ten days" for a short time,
Ge 24:55;
Nu 11:19.
Ten is the number of the world powers hostile to the Church;
compare the ten horns of the beast,
Re 13:1.
unto death--so as even to endure death for My sake.
crown of life--
Jas 1:12;
2Ti 4:8,
"crown of righteousness";
1Pe 5:4,
"crown of glory." The crown is the garland, the mark of a
conqueror, or of one rejoicing, or at a feast; but
diadem is the mark of a KING.
11. shall not be hurt--Greek, "shall not by any means (or
possibly) be hurt."
the second death--"the lake of fire." "The death in life of the
lost, as contrasted with the life in death of the saved" [TRENCH]. The phrase "the second death" is peculiar to the
Apocalypse. What matter about the first death, which sooner or later
must pass over us, if we escape the second death? "It seems that
they who die that death shall be hurt by it; whereas, if it were
annihilation, and so a conclusion of their torments, it would be no way
hurtful, but highly beneficial to them. But the living torments are the
second death" [BISHOP
PEARSON]. "The life of the damned is death"
[AUGUSTINE]. Smyrna (meaning myrrh)
yielded its sweet perfume in being bruised even to death. Myrrh was
used in embalming dead bodies
(Joh 19:39);
was an ingredient in the holy anointing oil
(Ex 30:23);
a perfume of the heavenly Bridegroom
(Ps 45:8),
and of the bride
(So 3:6).
"Affliction, like it, is bitter for the time being, but
salutary; preserving the elect from corruption, and
seasoning them for immortality, and gives scope for the exercise
of the fragrantly breathing Christian virtues" [VITRINGA]. POLYCARP'S noble words
to his heathen judges who wished him to recant, are well known:
"Fourscore and six years have I served the Lord, and He never wronged
me, how then can I blaspheme my King and Saviour?" Smyrna's
faithfulness is rewarded by its candlestick not having been removed out
of its place
(Re 2:5);
Christianity has never wholly left it; whence the Turks call it,
"Infidel Smyrna."
12. TRENCH prefers writing Pergamus,
or rather, Pergamum, on the river Caicus. It was capital of
Attalus the Second's kingdom, which was bequeathed by him to the
Romans, 133 B.C. Famous for its library, founded
by Eumenes (197-159), and destroyed by Caliph Omar. Parchment,
that is, Pergamena charta, was here discovered for book
purposes. Also famous for the magnificent temple of Æsculapius,
the healing god [TACITUS, Annals, 3.63].
he which hath the sharp sword with two edges--appropriate to His
address having a twofold bearing, a searching power so as to convict
and convert some
(Re 2:13, 17),
and to convict and condemn to punishment others
(Re 2:14-16,
especially
Re 2:16;
compare also see on
Re 1:16).
13. I know thy works--Two oldest manuscripts omit this clause;
one oldest manuscript retains it.
Satan's seat--rather as the Greek is translated all
through Revelation, "throne." Satan, in impious mimicry of God's
heavenly throne, sets up his earthly throne
(Re 4:2).
Æsculapius was worshipped there under the serpent form; and
Satan, the old serpent, as the instigator (compare
Re 2:10)
of fanatical devotees of Æsculapius, and, through them, of the
supreme magistracy at Pergamos, persecuted one of the Lord's people
(Antipas) even to death. Thus, this address is an anticipatory preface
to
Re 12:1-17;
Note: "throne . . . the dragon, Satan
. . . war with her seed,"
Re 12:5, 9, 17.
even in those days--Two oldest manuscripts omit "even"; two
retain it.
wherein--Two oldest manuscripts omit this (then translate, "in
the days of Antipas, My faithful witness," or "martyr"); two retain it.
Two oldest manuscripts read, "My witness, MY faithful one"; two read as
English Version. Antipas is another form for Antipater. SIMEON METAPHRASTES has a palpably
legendary story, unknown to the early Fathers, that Antipas, in
Domitian's reign, was shut up in a red-hot brazen bull, and ended his
life in thanksgivings and prayers. HENGSTENBERG
makes the name, like other apocalyptic names, symbolical, meaning one
standing out "against all" for Christ's sake.
14. few--in comparison of the many tokens of thy
faithfulness.
hold the doctrine of Balaam--"the teaching of Balaam,"
namely, that which he "taught Balak." Compare "the counsel of Balaam,"
Nu 31:16.
"Balak" is dative in the Greek, whence
BENGEL translates, "taught (the Moabites) for
(that is, to please) Balak." But though in Numbers it is not expressly
said he taught Balak, yet there is nothing said inconsistent
with his having done so; and JOSEPHUS
[Antiquities,4. 6. 6], says he did so. The dative case is a
Hebraism for the accusative case.
children--Greek, "sons of Israel."
stumbling-block--literally, that part of a trap on which the
bait was laid, and which, when touched, caused the trap to close on its
prey; then any entanglement to the foot [TRENCH].
eat things sacrificed unto idols--the act common to the
Israelites of old, and the Nicolaitanes in John's day; he does not add
what was peculiar to the Israelites, namely, that they
sacrificed to idols. The temptation to eat idol-meats was a
peculiarly strong one to the Gentile converts. For not to do so
involved almost a withdrawal from partaking of any social meal with the
heathen around. For idol-meats, after a part had been offered in
sacrifice, were nearly sure to be on the heathen entertainer's table;
so much so, that the Greek "to kill" (thuein) meant
originally "to sacrifice." Hence arose the decree of the council of
Jerusalem forbidding to eat such meats; subsequently some at Corinth
ate unscrupulously and knowingly of such meats, on the ground
that the idol is nothing; others needlessly tortured themselves with
scruples, lest unknowingly they should eat of them when they got
meat from the market or in a heathen friend's house. Paul handles the
question in
1Co 8:1-13; 10:25-33.
fornication--often connected with idolatry.
15. thou--emphatic: "So THOU also hast," As
Balak and the Moabites of old had Balaam and his followers literally,
so hast thou also them that hold the same Balaamite or
Nicolaitane doctrine spiritually or symbolically. Literal eating
of idol-meats and fornication in Pergamos were accompanied by spiritual
idolatry and fornication. So TRENCH explains. But
I prefer taking it, "THOU also," as well as
Ephesus ("in like manner" as Ephesus; see below the oldest reading),
hast . . . Nicolaitanes, with this important difference,
Ephesus, as a Church, hates them and casts them out, but thou
"hast them," namely, in the Church.
doctrine--teaching (see on
Re 2:6):
namely, to tempt God's people to idolatry.
which thing I hate--It is sin not to hate what God hates. The
Ephesian Church
(Re 2:6)
had this point of superiority to Pergamos. But the three oldest
manuscripts, and Vulgate and Syriac, read instead of
"which I hate," "IN LIKE MANNER."
16. The three oldest manuscripts read, "Repent,
therefore." Not only the Nicolaitanes, but the whole Church of
Pergamos is called on to repent of not having hated the
Nicolaitane teaching and practice. Contrast Paul,
Ac 20:26.
I will come--I am coming.
fight against them--Greek, "war with them"; with the
Nicolaitanes primarily; but including also chastisement of the
whole Church at Pergamos: compare "unto THEE."
with the sword of my mouth--resumed from
Re 1:16,
but with an allusion to the drawn sword with which the angel of
the Lord confronted Balaam on his way to curse Israel: an earnest of
the sword by which he and the seduced Israelites fell at last.
The spiritual Balaamites of John's day are to be smitten with the
Lord's spiritual sword, the word or "rod of His mouth."
17. to eat--omitted in the three oldest manuscripts.
the hidden manna--the heavenly food of Israel, in contrast to
the idol-meats
(Re 2:14).
A pot of manna was laid up in the holy place "before the testimony."
The allusion is here to this: probably also to the Lord's discourse
(Joh 6:31-35).
Translate, "the manna which is hidden." As the manna hidden in the
sanctuary was by divine power preserved from corruption, so Christ in
His incorruptible body has passed into the heavens, and is hidden there
until the time of His appearing. Christ Himself is the manna "hidden"
from the world, but revealed to the believer, so that he has already a
foretaste of His preciousness. Compare as to Christ's own hidden food
on earth,
Joh 4:32, 34,
and Job 23:12.
The full manifestation shall be at His coming. Believers are now
hidden, even as their meat is hidden. As the manna in the sanctuary,
unlike the other manna, was incorruptible, so the spiritual feast
offered to all who reject the world's dainties for Christ is
everlasting: an incorruptible body and life for ever in Christ at the
resurrection.
white stone . . . new name . . . no man knoweth
saving he--TRENCH'S explanation seems best.
White is the color and livery of heaven. "New" implies
something altogether renewed and heavenly. The white stone is a
glistening diamond, the Urim borne by the high priest within the
choschen or breastplate of judgment, with the twelve tribes'
names on the twelve precious stones, next the heart. The word
Urim means "light," answering to the color white. None
but the high priest knew the name written upon it, probably the
incommunicable name of God, "Jehovah." The high priest consulted it in
some divinely appointed way to get direction from God when needful. The
"new name" is Christ's (compare
Re 3:12,
"I will write upon him My new name"): some new revelation of
Himself which shall hereafter be imparted to His people, and which they
alone are capable of receiving. The connection with the "hidden manna"
will thus be clear, as none save the high priest had access to the
"manna hidden" in the sanctuary. Believers, as spiritual priests unto
God, shall enjoy the heavenly antitypes to the hidden manna and the
Urim stone. What they had peculiarly to contend against at Pergamos was
the temptation to idol-meats, and fornication, put in
their way by Balaamites. As Phinehas was rewarded with "an everlasting
priesthood" for his zeal against these very sins to which the Old
Testament Balaam seduced Israel; so the heavenly high priesthood is the
reward promised here to those zealous against the New Testament
Balaamites tempting Christ's people to the same sins.
receiveth it--namely, "the stone"; not "the new name"; see
above. The "name that no man knew but Christ Himself," He shall
hereafter reveal to His people.
18. Thyatira--in Lydia, south of Pergamos. Lydia, the
purple-seller of this city, having been converted at Philippi, a
Macedonian city (with which Thyatira, as being a Macedonian colony, had
naturally much intercourse), was probably the instrument of first
carrying the Gospel to her native town. John follows the geographical
order here, for Thyatira lay a little to the left of the road from
Pergamos to Sardis [STRABO, 13:4].
Son of God . . . eyes like . . . fire
. . . feet . . . like fine brass--or "glowing
brass" (see on
Re 1:14,15,
whence this description is resumed). Again His attributes accord with
His address. The title "Son of God," is from
Ps 2:7, 9,
which is referred to in
Re 2:27.
The attribute, "eyes like a flame," &c., answers to
Re 2:23,
"I am He which searcheth the reins and hearts." The attribute, "feet
like . . . brass," answers to
Re 2:27,
"as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken to shivers," He
treading them to pieces with His strong feet.
19. The oldest manuscripts transpose the English Version
order, and read, "faith and service." The four are subordinate to "thy
works"; thus, "I know thy works, even the love and the faith
(these two forming one pair, as 'faith works by love,'
Ga 5:6),
and the service (ministration to the suffering members of the
Church, and to all in spiritual or temporal need), and the endurance of
(that is, shown by) thee (this pronoun belongs to all four)." As
love is inward, so service is its outward manifestation.
Similarly, faith and persevering endurance, or
"patient continuance (the same Greek as here,
Ro 2:7)
in well-doing," are connected.
and thy works; and the last--Omit the second "and," with the
three oldest manuscripts and the ancient versions; translate, "And (I
know) thy works which are last (to be) more in number than the first";
realizing
1Th 4:1;
the converse of
Mt 12:45; 2Pe 2:20.
Instead of retrograding from "the first works" and "first love," as
Ephesus, Thyatira's last works exceeded her first
(Re 2:4, 5).
20. a few things--omitted in the three oldest manuscripts.
Translate then, "I have against thee that," &c.
sufferest--The three oldest manuscripts read, "lettest alone."
that woman--Two oldest manuscripts read,
"THY wife"; two omit it. Vulgate and most
ancient versions read as English Version. The symbolical Jezebel
was to the Church of Thyatira what Jezebel, Ahab's "wife," was to him.
Some self-styled prophetess (or as the feminine in Hebrew is
often used collectively to express a multitude, a set of
false prophets), as closely attached to the Church of Thyatira as a
wife is to a husband, and as powerfully influencing for evil
that Church as Jezebel did Ahab. As Balaam, in Israel's early history,
so Jezebel, daughter of Eth-baal, king of Sidon
(1Ki 16:31,
formerly priest of Astarte, and murderer of his predecessor on the
throne, JOSEPHUS
[Against Apion, 1.18]), was the great seducer to
idolatry in Israel's later history. Like her father, she was swift to
shed blood. Wholly given to Baal worship, like Eth-baal, whose name
expresses his idolatry, she, with her strong will, seduced the weak
Ahab and Israel beyond the calf-worship (which was a worship of the
true God under the cherub-ox form, that is, a violation of the second
commandment) to that of Baal
(a violation of the first commandment also).
She seems to have been herself a priestess and prophetess of
Baal. Compare
2Ki 9:22, 30,
"whoredoms of . . . Jezebel and her
witchcrafts" (impurity was part of the worship of the
Phœnician Astarte, or Venus). Her spiritual counterpart at
Thyatira lured God's "servants" by pretended utterances of inspiration
to the same libertinism, fornication, and eating of idol-meats, as the
Balaamites and Nicolaitanes
(Re 2:6, 14, 15).
By a false spiritualism these seducers led their victims into the
grossest carnality, as though things done in the flesh were outside the
true man, and were, therefore, indifferent. "The deeper the Church
penetrated into heathenism, the more she herself became heathenish;
this prepares us for the expressions 'harlot' and 'Babylon,' applied to
her afterwards" [AUBERLEN].
to teach and to seduce--The three oldest manuscripts read, "and
she teaches and seduces," or "deceives." "Thyatira was just the reverse
of Ephesus. There, much zeal for orthodoxy, but little love; here,
activity of faith and love, but insufficient zeal for godly discipline
and doctrine, a patience of error even where there was not a
participation in it" [TRENCH].
21. space--Greek, "time."
of her fornication . . . she repented not--The three
oldest manuscripts read, "and she willeth not to repent
of (literally, 'out of,' that is, so as to come out of)
her fornication." Here there is a transition from literal to
spiritual fornication, as appears from
Re 2:22.
The idea arose from Jehovah's covenant relation to the Old Testament
Church being regarded as a marriage, any transgression against which
was, therefore, harlotry, fornication, or adultery.
22. Behold--calling attention to her awful doom to come.
I will--Greek present, "I cast her."
a bed--The place of her sin shall be the place of her
punishment. The bed of her sin shall be her bed of sickness and
anguish. Perhaps a pestilence was about to be sent. Or the bed of the
grave, and of the hell beyond, where the worm dieth not.
them that commit adultery with her--spiritually; including both
the eating of idol-meats and fornication. "With her," in
the Greek, implies participation with her in her
adulteries, namely, by suffering her
(Re 2:20),
or letting her alone, and so virtually encouraging her.
Her punishment is distinct from theirs; she is to be cast into a
bed, and her children to be killed; while those
who make themselves partakers of her sin by tolerating her, are to be
cast into great tribulation.
except they repent--Greek aorist, "repent" at
once; shall have repented by the time limited in My purpose.
their deeds--Two of the oldest manuscripts and most ancient
versions read "her." Thus, God's true servants, who by connivance, are
incurring the guilt of her deeds, are distinguished from her.
One oldest manuscript, ANDREAS, and
CYPRIAN, support "their."
23. her children--
(Isa 57:3;
Eze 23:45, 47).
Her proper adherents; not those who suffer her, but those who
are begotten of her. A distinct class from the last in
Re 2:22
(compare Note, see on
Re 2:22),
whose sin was less direct, being that only of connivance.
kill . . . with death--Compare the disaster that
overtook the literal Jezebel's votaries of Baal, and Ahab's sons,
1Ki 18:40;
2Ki 10:6, 7, 24, 25.
Kill with death is a Hebraism for slay with most sure and
awful death; so "dying thou shalt die"
(Ge 2:17).
Not "die the common death of men"
(Nu 16:29).
all the churches shall know--implying that these addresses are
designed for the catholic Church of all ages and places. So palpably
shall God's hand be seen in the judgment on Thyatira, that the whole
Church shall recognize it as God's doing.
I am he--the "I" is strongly emphatical: "that it is I am
He who," &c.
searcheth . . . hearts--God's peculiar attribute is
given to Christ. The "reins" are the seat of the desires; the "heart,"
that of the thoughts. The Greek for "searcheth" expresses an
accurate following up of all tracks and windings.
unto every one of you--literally, "unto you, to each."
according to your works--to be judged not according to the mere
act as it appears to man, but with reference to the motive,
faith and love being the only motives which God
recognizes as sound.
24. you . . . and . . . the rest--The three
oldest manuscripts omit "and"; translate then, "Unto you, the rest."
as many as have not--not only do not hold, but are free
from contact with.
and which--The oldest manuscripts omit "and"; translate,
"whosoever."
the depths--These false prophets boasted peculiarly of their
knowledge of mysteries and the deep things of God;
pretensions subsequently expressed by their arrogant title,
Gnostics ("full of knowledge"). The Spirit here declares their
so-called "depths," (namely, of knowledge of divine things) to be
really "depths of Satan"; just as in
Re 2:9,
He says, instead of "the synagogue of God," "the synagogue of
Satan." HENGSTENBERG thinks the teachers
themselves professed to fathom the depths of Satan, giving loose
rein to fleshly lusts, without being hurt thereby. They who thus think
to fight Satan with his own weapons always find him more than a match
for them. The words, "as they speak," that is, "as they call them,"
coming after not only "depths," but "depths of Satan," seem to favor
this latter view; otherwise I should prefer the former, in which case,
"as they speak," or "call them," must refer to "depths" only, not also
"depths of Satan." The original sin of Adam was a desire to know
EVIL as well as good, so in HENGSTENBERG'S view, those who professed to know "the
depths of Satan." It is the prerogative of God alone to know evil
fully, without being hurt or defiled by it.
I will put--Two oldest manuscripts have "I put," or "cast." One
oldest manuscript reads as English Version.
none other burden--save abstinence from, and protestation
against, these abominations; no "depths" beyond your reach, such as
they teach, no new doctrine, but the old faith and rule of practice
once for all delivered to the saints. Exaggerating and perfecting
Paul's doctrine of grace without the law as the source of justification
and sanctification, these false prophets rejected the law as a rule of
life, as though it were an intolerable "burden." But it is a "light"
burden. In
Ac 15:28, 29,
the very term "burden," as here, is used of abstinence from fornication
and idol-meats; to this the Lord here refers.
25. that which ye have already--
(Jude 3,
end).
hold fast--do not let go from your grasp, however false teachers
may wish to wrest it from you.
till I come--when your conflict with evil will be at an end. The
Greek implies uncertainty as to when He shall come.
26. And--implying the close connection of the promise to the
conqueror that follows, with the preceding exhortation,
Re 2:25.
and keepeth--Greek, "and he that keepeth." Compare the
same word in the passage already alluded to by the Lord,
Ac 15:28, 29,
end.
my works--in contrast to "her (English Version, 'their')
works"
(Re 2:22).
The works which I command and which are the fruit of My Spirit.
unto the end--
(Mt 24:13).
The image is perhaps from the race, wherein it is not enough to enter
the lists, but the runner must persevere to the end.
give power--Greek, "authority."
over the nations--at Christ's coming the saints shall possess
the kingdom "under the whole heaven"; therefore over this earth;
compare
Lu 19:17,
"have thou authority [the same word as here] over ten
cities."
27. From
Ps 2:8, 9.
rule--literally, "rule as a shepherd." In
Ps 2:9
it is, "Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron." The
Septuagint, pointing the Hebrew word differently, read as
Revelation here. The English Version of
Ps 2:9
is doubtless right, as the parallel word, "dash in pieces," proves. But
the Spirit in this case sanctions the additional thought as
true, that the Lord shall mingle mercy to some, with judgment on
others; beginning by destroying His Antichristian foes, He shall reign
in love over the rest. "Christ shall rule them with a scepter of
iron, to make them capable of being ruled with a scepter of gold;
severity first, that grace may come after" (TRENCH, who thinks we ought to translate "SCEPTER" for "rod," as in
Heb 1:8).
"Shepherd" is used in
Jer 6:3,
of hostile rulers; so also in
Zec 11:16.
As severity here is the primary thought, "rule as a shepherd" seems to
me to be used thus: He who would have shepherded them with a pastoral
rod, shall, because of their hardened unbelief, shepherd them with a
rod of iron.
shall they be broken--So one oldest manuscript, Vulgate,
Syriac, and Coptic Versions read. But two oldest
manuscripts, read, "as the vessels of a potter are broken to
shivers." A potter's vessel dashed to pieces, because of its
failing to answer the design of the maker, is the image to depict God's
sovereign power to give reprobates to destruction, not by caprice, but
in the exercise of His righteous judgment. The saints shall be in
Christ's victorious "armies" when He shall inflict the last decisive
blow, and afterwards shall reign with Him. Having by faith "overcome
the world," they shall also rule the world.
even as I--"as I also have received of (from) My Father,"
namely, in
Ps 2:7-9.
Jesus had refused to receive the kingdom without the cross at Satan's
hands; He would receive it from none but the Father, who had appointed
the cross as the path to the crown. As the Father has given the
authority to Me over the heathen and uttermost parts of the earth, so I
impart a share of it to My victorious disciple.
28. the morning star--that is, I will give unto him
Myself, who am "the morning star"
(Re 22:16);
so that reflecting My perfect brightness, he shall shine like Me, the
morning star, and share My kingly glory (of which a star
is the symbol,
Nu 21:17;
Mt 2:2).
Compare
Re 2:17,
"I will give him . . . the hidden manna," that is,
Myself, who am that manna
(Joh 6:31-33).
CHAPTER 3
Re 3:1-22.
THE
EPISTLES TO
SARDIS,
PHILADELPHIA, AND
LAODICEA.
1. Sardis--the ancient capital of Lydia, the kingdom of wealthy
Croesus, on the river Pactolus. The address to this Church is full of
rebuke. It does not seem to have been in vain; for
MELITO, bishop of Sardis in the second century,
was eminent for piety and learning. He visited Palestine to assure
himself and his flock as to the Old Testament canon and wrote an
epistle on the subject [EUSEBIUS Ecclesiastical
History, 4.26]; he also wrote a commentary on the Apocalypse
[EUSEBIUS, Ecclesiastical History, 4.26;
JEROME, On Illustrious Men, 24].
he that hath the seven Spirits of God--that is, He who hath all
the fulness of the Spirit
(Re 1:4; 4:5; 5:6,
with which compare
Zec 3:9; 4:10,
proving His Godhead). This attribute implies His infinite power by the
Spirit to convict of sin and of a hollow profession.
and the seven stars--
(Re 1:16, 20).
His having the seven stars, or presiding ministers, flows, as a
consequence, from His having the seven Spirits, or the fulness
of the Holy Spirit. The human ministry is the fruit of Christ's sending
down the gifts of the Spirit. Stars imply brilliancy and glory;
the fulness of the Spirit, and the fulness of brilliant light in Him,
form a designed contrast to the formality which He reproves.
name . . . livest . . . dead--
(1Ti 5:6;
2Ti 3:5;
Tit 1:16;
compare
Eph 2:1, 5; 5:14).
"A name," that is, a reputation. Sardis was famed among the churches
for spiritual vitality; yet the Heart-searcher, who seeth not as
man seeth, pronounces her dead; how great searchings of heart
should her case create among even the best of us! Laodicea deceived
herself as to her true state
(Re 3:17),
but it is not written that she had a high name among the other
churches, as Sardis had.
2. Be--Greek. "Become," what thou art not, "watchful," or
"wakeful," literally, "waking."
the things which remain--Strengthen those thy remaining few
graces, which, in thy spiritual deadly slumber, are not yet quite
extinct [ALFORD]. "The things that remain" can
hardly mean "the PERSONS that are not yet dead,
but are ready to die"; for
Re 3:4
implies that the "few" faithful ones at Sardis were not "ready to die,"
but were full of life.
are--The two oldest manuscripts read, "were ready," literally,
"were about to die," namely, at the time when you "strengthen" them.
This implies that "thou art dead,"
Re 3:1,
is to be taken with limitation; for those must have some life who are
told to strengthen the things that remain.
perfect--literally, "filled up in full complement"; Translate,
"complete." Weighed in the balance of Him who requires living faith as
the motive of works, and found wanting.
before God--Greek, "in the sight of God." The three
oldest manuscripts, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic, read,
"before (in the sight of) MY God"; Christ's judgment is God the
Father's judgment. In the sight of men, Sardis had "a name of living":
"so many and so great are the obligations of pastors, that he who would
in reality fulfil even a third of them, would be esteemed holy by men,
whereas, if content with that alone, he would be sure not to escape
hell" [JUAN D'AVILA]. Note:
in Sardis and Laodicea alone of the seven we read of no conflict with
foes within or without the Church. Not that either had renounced the
appearance of opposition to the world; but neither had the
faithfulness to witness for God by word and example, so as to "torment
them that dwelt on the earth"
(Re 11:10).
3. how thou hast received--
(Col 2:6;
1Th 4:1;
1Ti 6:20).
What Sardis is to "remember" is, not how joyfully she had
received originally the Gospel message, but how the precious deposit
was committed to her originally, so that she could not say, she had not
"received and heard" it. The Greek is not aorist (as in
Re 2:4,
as to Ephesus, "Thou didst leave thy first love"), but "thou
hast received" (perfect), and still hast the permanent deposit of
doctrine committed to thee. The word "keep" (so the Greek is for
English Version, "hold fast") which follows, accords with this
sense. "Keep" or observe the commandment which thou hast received and
didst hear.
heard--Greek aorist, "didst hear," namely, when the
Gospel doctrine was committed to thee. TRENCH
explains "how," with what demonstration of the Spirit and power
from Christ's ambassadors the truth came to you, and how heartily and
zealously you at first received it. Similarly
BENGEL, "Regard to her former character
(how it once stood) ought to guard Sardis against the future
hour, whatsoever it shall be, proving fatal to her." But it is
not likely that the Spirit repeats the same exhortation virtually to
Sardis as to Ephesus.
If therefore--seeing thou art so warned, if, nevertheless, &c.
come on thee as a thief--in special judgment on thee as a
Church, with the same stealthiness and as unexpectedly as shall be My
visible second coming. As the thief gives no notice of his
approach. Christ applies the language which in its fullest sense
describes His second coming, to describe His coming in special
judgments on churches and states (as Jerusalem,
Mt 24:4-28)
these special judgments being anticipatory earnests of that great last
coming. "The last day is hidden from us, that every day may be observed
by us" [AUGUSTINE]. Twice Christ in the days of
His flesh spake the same words
(Mt 24:42, 43;
Lu 12:39, 40);
and so deeply had His words been engraven on the minds of the apostles
that they are often repeated in their writings
(Re 16:15;
1Th 5:2, 4, 6;
2Pe 3:10).
The Greek proverb was that "the feet of the avenging deities are shod
with wool," expressing the noiseless approach of the divine judgments,
and their possible nearness at the moment when they were supposed the
farthest off [TRENCH].
4. The three oldest manuscripts prefix "but," or "nevertheless"
(notwithstanding thy spiritual deadness), and omit "even."
names--persons named in the book of life
(Re 3:5)
known by name by the Lord as His own. These had the reality
corresponding to their name; not a mere name among men as
living, while really dead
(Re 3:1).
The gracious Lord does not overlook any exceptional cases of real
saints in the midst of unreal professors.
not defiled their garments--namely, the garments of their
Christian profession, of which baptism is the initiatory seal, whence
the candidates for baptism used in the ancient Church to be arrayed in
white. Compare also
Eph 5:27,
as to the spotlessness of the Church when she shall be presented to
Christ; and
Re 19:8,
as to the "fine linen, clean and white, the righteousness of the
saints," in which it shall be granted to her to be arrayed; and "the
wedding garment." Meanwhile she is not to sully her Christian
profession with any defilement of flesh or spirit, but to "keep her
garments." For no defilement shall enter the heavenly city. Not that
any keep themselves here wholly free from defilement; but, as compared
with hollow professors, the godly keep themselves unspotted from the
world; and when they do contract it, they wash it away, so as to
have their "robes white in the blood of the Lamb"
(Re 7:14).
The Greek is not "to stain" (Greek, "miainein"),
but to "defile," or besmear (Greek, "molunein"),
So 5:3.
they shall walk with me in white--The promised reward accords
with the character of those to be rewarded: keeping their garments
undefiled and white through the blood of the Lamb now, they shall
walk with Him in while hereafter. On "with me," compare the very
same words,
Lu 23:43;
Joh 17:24.
"Walk" implies spiritual life, for only the living walk; also liberty,
for it is only the free who walk at large. The grace and dignity of
flowing long garments is seen to best advantage when the person
"walks": so the graces of the saint's manifested character shall appear
fully when he shall serve the Lord perfectly hereafter
(Re 22:3).
they are worthy--with the worthiness (not their own, but that)
which Christ has put on them
(Re 7:14).
Eze 16:14,
"perfect through MY comeliness which I had put upon thee." Grace is
glory in the bud. "The worthiness here denotes a congruity
between the saint's state of grace on earth, and that of
glory, which the Lord has appointed for them, about to be
estimated by the law itself of grace" [VITRINGA].
Contrast
Ac 13:46.
5. white--not a dull white, but glittering, dazzling white
[GROTIUS]. Compare
Mt 13:43.
The body transfigured into the likeness of Christ's body, and emitting
beams of light reflected from Him, is probably the "white raiment"
promised here.
the same--Greek, "THIS man"; he and
he alone. So one oldest manuscript reads. But two oldest manuscripts,
and most of the ancient versions, "shall THUS be
clothed," &c.
raiment--Greek, "garments." "He that overcometh" shall
receive the same reward as they who "have not defiled their garments"
(Re 3:4);
therefore the two are identical.
I will not--Greek, "I will not by any means."
blot out . . . name out of . . . book of
life--of the heavenly city. A register was kept in ancient cities
of their citizens: the names of the dead were of course erased. So
those who have a name that they live and are dead
(Re 3:1),
are blotted out of God's roll of the heavenly citizens and heirs of
eternal life; not that in God's electing decree they ever were
in His book of life. But, according to human conceptions, those who had
a high name for piety would be supposed to be in it, and were, in
respect to privileges, actually among those in the way of salvation;
but these privileges, and the fact that they once might have been
saved, shall be of no avail to them. As to the book of life,
compare
Re
13:8; 17:8; 20:12, 15; 21:27;
Ex 32:32;
Ps 69:28;
Da 12:1.
In the sense of the "call," many are enrolled among the called
to salvation, who shall not be found among the chosen at last.
The pale of salvation is wider than that of election. Election is
fixed. Salvation is open to all and is pending (humanly speaking) in
the case of those mentioned here. But
Re 20:15; 21:27,
exhibit the book of the elect alone in the narrower sense, after the
erasure of the others.
before . . . before--Greek, "in the presence
of." Compare the same promise of Christ's confessing before His Father
those who confessed Him,
Mt 10:32, 33;
Lu 12:8, 9.
He omits "in heaven" after "My Father," because there is, now that He
is in heaven, no contrast between the Father in heaven and the
Son on earth. He now sets His seal from heaven upon many of His
words uttered on earth [TRENCH]. An undesigned
coincidence, proving that these epistles are, as they profess, in their
words, as well as substance, Christ's own addresses; not even tinged
with the color of John's style, such as it appears in his Gospel and
Epistles. The coincidence is mainly with the three other Gospels, and
not with John's, which makes the coincidence more markedly undesigned.
So also the clause, "He that hath an ear, let him hear," is not
repeated from John's Gospel, but from the Lord's own words in the three
synoptic Gospels
(Mt 11:15; 13:9;
Mr 4:9, 23; 7:16;
Lu 8:8; 14:35).
6. (See on
Re 2:7.)
7. Philadelphia--in Lydia, twenty-eight miles southeast of
Sardis, built by Attalus Philadelphus, king of Pergamos, who died
A.D. 138. It was nearly destroyed by an earthquake
in the reign of Tiberius [TACITUS, Annals,
2.47]. The connection of this Church with Jews there causes the address
to it to have an Old Testament coloring in the images employed. It and
Smyrna alone of the seven receive unmixed praise.
he that is holy--as in the Old Testament, "the Holy One
of Israel." Thus Jesus and the God of the Old Testament are one. None
but God is absolutely holy (Greek, "hagios," separate
from evil and perfectly hating it). In contrast to "the synagogue of
Satan"
(Re 3:9).
true--Greek, "alethinos":
"VERY God," as distinguished from the false gods
and from all those who say that they are what they are
not
(Re 3:9):
real, genuine. Furthermore, He perfectly realizes all that is
involved in the names, GOD, Light
(Joh 1:9;
1Jo 2:8),
Bread
(Joh 6:32),
the Vine
(Joh 15:1);
as distinguished from all typical, partial, and imperfect realizations
of the idea. His nature answers to His name
(Joh 17:3;
1Th 1:9).
The Greek, "alethes," on the other hand, is
"truth-speaking," "truth-loving"
(Joh 3:33;
Tit 1:2).
he that hath the key of David--the antitype of Eliakim, to whom
the "key," the emblem of authority "over the house of David," was
transferred from Shebna, who was removed from the office of chamberlain
or treasurer, as unworthy of it. Christ, the Heir of the throne of
David, shall supplant all the less worthy stewards who have abused
their trust in God's spiritual house, and "shall reign over the house
of Jacob," literal and spiritual
(Lu 1:32, 33),
"for ever," "as a Son over His own house"
(Heb 3:2-6).
It rests with Christ to open or shut the heavenly palace, deciding who
is, and who is not, to be admitted: as He also opens, or shuts, the
prison, having the keys of hell (the grave) and
death
(Re 1:18).
The power of the keys was given to Peter and the other apostles, only
when, and in so far as, Christ made him and them infallible. Whatever
degrees of this power may have been committed to ministers, the supreme
power belongs to Christ alone. Thus Peter rightly opened the Gospel
door to the Gentiles
(Ac 10:1-48; 11:17, 18;
especially
Ac 14:27,
end). But he wrongly tried to shut the door in part again
(Ga 2:11-18).
Eliakim had "the key of the house of David laid upon his shoulder":
Christ, as the antitypical David, Himself has the key of the supreme
"government upon His shoulder." His attribute here, as in the former
addresses, accords with His promise. Though "the synagogue of Satan,"
false "Jews"
(Re 3:9)
try to "shut" the "door" which I "set open before thee"; "no man can
shut it"
(Re 3:8).
shutteth--So Vulgate and Syriac Versions read. But
the four oldest manuscripts read, "shall shut"; so Coptic
Version and ORIGEN.
and no man openeth--Two oldest manuscripts, B, Aleph,
Coptic Version, and ORIGEN read, "shall
open." Two oldest manuscripts, A, C, and Vulgate Version support
English Version reading.
8. I have set--Greek, "given": it is My gracious
gift to thee.
open door--for evangelization; a door of spiritual usefulness.
The opening of a door by Him to the Philadelphian Church accords
with the previous assignation to Him of "the key of David."
and--The three oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, and ORIGEN read, "which no man can shut."
for--"because."
a little--This gives the idea that Christ says, He sets before
Philadelphia an open door because she has some little strength;
whereas the sense rather is, He does so because she has "but
little strength": being consciously weak herself, she is the fitter
object for God's power to rest on [so AQUINAS],
that so the Lord Christ may have all the glory.
and hast kept--and so, the littleness of thy
strength becoming the source of Almighty power to thee, as leading
thee to rest wholly on My great power, thou hast kept My word.
GROTIUS makes "little strength" to mean that she
had a Church small in numbers and external resources: "a little
flock poor in worldly goods, and of small account in the eyes of men"
[TRENCH]. So ALFORD. I prefer
the view given above. The Greek verbs are in the aorist tense:
"Thou didst keep . . . didst not deny My name": alluding to
some particular occasion when her faithfulness was put to the test.
9. I will make--Greek present, "I make," literally, "I
give" (see on
Re 3:8).
The promise to Philadelphia is larger than that to Smyrna. To Smyrna
the promise was that "the synagogue of Satan" should not prevail
against the faithful in her: to Philadelphia, that she should even win
over some of "the synagogue of Satan" to fall on their faces and
confess God is in her of a truth. Translate, "(some) of the
synagogue." For until Christ shall come, and all Israel then be
saved, there is but "a remnant" being gathered out of the Jews
"according to the election of grace." This is an instance of how Christ
set before her an "open door," some of her greatest adversaries, the
Jews, being brought to the obedience of the faith. Their worshipping
before her feet expresses the convert's willingness to take the
very lowest place in the Church, doing servile honor to those whom once
they persecuted, rather than dwell with the ungodly. So the Philippian
jailer before Paul.
10. patience--"endurance." "The word of My endurance" is My
Gospel word, which teaches patient endurance in expectation
of my coming
(Re 1:9).
My endurance is the endurance which I require, and which I
practice. Christ Himself now endures, patiently waiting until
the usurper be cast out, and all "His enemies be made His footstool."
So, too, His Church, for the joy before her of sharing His coming
kingdom, endures patiently. Hence, in
Re 3:11,
follows, "Behold, I come quickly."
I also--The reward is in kind: "because thou didst keep," &c. "I
also (on My side) will keep thee," &c.
from--Greek, "(so as to deliver thee) out of," not
to exempt from temptation.
the hour of temptation--the appointed season of
affliction and temptation (so in
De 4:34
the plagues are called "the temptations of Egypt"), literally,
"the temptation": the sore temptation which is coming on: the
time of great tribulation before Christ's second coming.
to try them that dwell upon the earth--those who are of earth,
earthy
(Re 8:13).
"Dwell" implies that their home is earth, not heaven. All mankind,
except the elect
(Re 13:8, 14).
The temptation brings out the fidelity of those kept by Christ
and hardens the unbelieving reprobates
(Re 9:20, 21; 16:11, 21).
The particular persecutions which befell Philadelphia shortly after,
were the earnest of the great last tribulation before Christ's coming,
to which the Church's attention in all ages is directed.
11. Behold--omitted by the three oldest manuscripts and most
ancient versions.
I come quickly--the great incentive to persevering faithfulness,
and the consolation under present trials.
that . . . which thou hast--"The word of my patience,"
or "endurance"
(Re 3:10),
which He had just commended them for keeping, and which involved with
it the attaining of the kingdom; this they would lose if they yielded
to the temptation of exchanging consistency and suffering for
compromise and ease.
that no man take thy crown--which otherwise thou wouldst
receive: that no tempter cause thee to lose it: not that the tempter
would thus secure it for himself
(Col 2:18).
12. pillar in the temple--In one sense there shall be "no
temple" in the heavenly city because there shall be no distinction of
things into sacred and secular, for all things and persons shall be
holy to the Lord. The city shall be all one great temple, in which the
saints shall be not merely stones, as m the spiritual temple now
on earth, but all eminent as pillars: immovably firm (unlike
Philadelphia, the city which was so often shaken by earthquakes,
STRABO [12 and 13]), like the colossal pillars
before Solomon's temple, Boaz (that is, "In it is strength") and Jachin
("It shall be established"): only that those pillars were outside,
these shall be within the temple.
my God--(See on
Re 2:7).
go no more out--The Greek is stronger, never more at
all. As the elect angels are beyond the possibility of falling,
being now under (as the Schoolmen say) "the blessed necessity of
goodness," so shall the saints be. The door shall be once for all shut,
as well to shut safely in for ever the elect, as to shut out the lost
(Mt 25:10;
Joh 8:35;
compare
Isa 22:23,
the type, Eliakim). They shall be priests for ever unto God
(Re 1:6).
"Who would not yearn for that city out of which no friend departs, and
into which no enemy enters?" [AUGUSTINE in
TRENCH].
write upon him the name of my God--as belonging to God in a
peculiar sense
(Re 7:3; 9:4; 14:1;
and especially
Re 22:4),
therefore secure. As the name of Jehovah ("Holiness to the Lord") was
on the golden plate on the high priest's forehead
(Ex 28:36-38);
so the saints in their heavenly royal priesthood shall bear His name
openly, as consecrated to Him. Compare the caricature of this in the
brand on the forehead of the beast's followers
(Re 13:16, 17),
and on the harlot
(Re 17:5;
compare
Re 20:4).
name of the city of my God--as one of its citizens
(Re 21:2, 3, 10,
which is briefly alluded to by anticipation here). The full description
of the city forms the appropriate close of the book. The saint's
citizenship is now hidden, but then it shall be manifested: he shall
have the right to enter in through the gates into the city
(Re 22:14).
This was the city which Abraham looked for.
new--Greek, "kaine." Not the old Jerusalem, once
called "the holy city," but having forfeited the name. Greek,
"nea," would express that it had recently come into
existence; but Greek, "kaine," that which is new and
different, superseding the worn-out old Jerusalem and its polity.
"John, in the Gospel, applies to the old city the Greek name
Hierosolyma. But in the Apocalypse, always, to the heavenly city
the Hebrew name, Hierousalem. The Hebrew name is the
original and holier one: the Greek, the recent and more secular
and political one" [BENGEL].
my new name--at present incommunicable and only known to God: to
be hereafter revealed and made the believer's own in union with God in
Christ. Christ's name written on him denotes he shall be wholly
Christ's. New also relates to Christ, who shall assume a new
character (answering to His "new name") entering with His saints on a
kingdom--not that which He had with the Father before the worlds, but
that earned by His humiliation as Son of man.
GIBBON, the infidel [Decline and Fall, ch.
64], gives an unwilling testimony to the fulfilment of the prophecy as
to Philadelphia from a temporal point of view, Among the Greek colonies
and churches of Asia, Philadelphia is still erect,--a column in
a scene of ruins--a pleasing example that the paths of honor and safety
may sometimes be the same."
13. (See on
Re 2:7).
14. Laodiceans--The city was in the southwest of Phrygia, on the
river Lycus, not far from Colosse, and lying between it and
Philadelphia. It was destroyed by an earthquake,
A.D. 62, and rebuilt by its wealthy citizens
without the help of the state [TACITUS,
Annals, 14.27]. This wealth (arising from the excellence of its
wools) led to a self-satisfied, lukewarm state in spiritual things, as
Re 3:17
describes. See on
Col 4:16,
on the Epistle which is thought to have been written to the Laodicean
Church by Paul. The Church in latter times was apparently flourishing;
for one of the councils at which the canon of Scripture was determined
was held in Laodicea in A.D. 361. Hardly a
Christian is now to be found on or near its site.
the Amen--
(Isa 65:16,
Hebrew, "Bless Himself in the God of Amen . . .
swear by the God of Amen,"
2Co 1:20).
He who not only says, but is, the Truth. The saints used
Amen at the end of prayer, or in assenting to the word of God;
but none, save the Son of God, ever said, "Amen, I say unto you," for
it is the language peculiar to God, who avers by Himself. The
New Testament formula, "Amen. I say unto you," is equivalent to the Old
Testament formula, "as I live, saith Jehovah." In John's Gospel
alone He uses (in the Greek) the double "Amen,"
Joh 1:51; 3:3,
&c.; in English Version," Verily, verily." The title happily
harmonizes with the address. His unchanging faithfulness as "the Amen"
contrasts with Laodicea's wavering of purpose, "neither hot nor cold"
(Re 3:16).
The angel of Laodicea has with some probability been conjectured to be
Archippus, to whom, thirty years previously, Paul had already given a
monition, as needing to be stirred up to diligence in his ministry. So
the Apostolic Constitutions, [8.46], name him as the first
bishop of Laodicea: supposed to be the son of Philemon
(Phm 2).
faithful and true witness--As "the Amen" expresses the
unchangeable truth of His promises; so "the faithful the true witness,"
the truth of His revelations as to the heavenly things which He has
seen and testifies. "Faithful," that is, trustworthy
(2Ti 2:11, 13).
"True" is here (Greek, "alethinos") not
truth-speaking (Greek, "alethes"), but "perfectly
realizing all that is comprehended in the name Witness"
(1Ti 6:13).
Three things are necessary for this: (1) to have seen with His own eyes
what He attests; (2) to be competent to relate it for others; (3) to be
willing truthfully to do so. In Christ all these conditions meet
[TRENCH].
beginning of the creation of God--not he whom God created first,
but as in
Col 1:15-18
(see on
Col 1:15-18),
the Beginner of all creation, its originating instrument. All
creation would not be represented adoring Him, if He were but one of
themselves. His being the Creator is a strong guarantee for His
faithfulness as "the Witness and Amen."
15. neither cold--The antithesis to "hot," literally, "boiling"
("fervent,"
Ac 18:25;
Ro 12:11;
compare
So 8:6;
Lu 24:32),
requires that "cold" should here mean more than negatively cold; it is
rather, positively icy cold: having never yet been warmed. The
Laodiceans were in spiritual things cold comparatively, but not
cold as the world outside, and as those who had never belonged
to the Church. The lukewarm state, if it be the transitional stage to a
warmer, is a desirable state (for a little religion, if real, is better
than none); but most fatal when, as here, an abiding condition, for it
is mistaken for a safe state
(Re 3:17).
This accounts for Christ's desiring that they were cold rather
than lukewarm. For then there would not be the same "danger of
mixed motive and disregarded principle" [ALFORD].
Also, there is more hope of the "cold," that is, those who are of the
world, and not yet warmed by the Gospel call; for, when called, they
may become hot and fervent Christians: such did the
once-cold publicans, Zaccheus and Matthew, become. But the
lukewarm has been brought within reach of the holy fire, without
being heated by it into fervor: having religion enough to lull
the conscience in false security, but not religion enough to save the
soul: as Demas,
2Ti 4:10.
Such were the halters between two opinions in Israel
(1Ki 18:21;
compare
2Ki 17:41;
Mt 6:24).
16. neither cold nor hot--So one oldest manuscript, B, and
Vulgate read. But two oldest manuscripts, Syriac, and
Coptic transpose thus, "hot nor cold." It is remarkable that the
Greek adjectives are in the masculine, agreeing with the angel,
not feminine, agreeing with the Church. The Lord addresses the angel as
the embodiment and representative of the Church. The chief minister is
answerable for his flock if he have not faithfully warned the members
of it.
I will--Greek, "I am about to," "I am ready to": I have
it in my mind: implying graciously the possibility of the threat not
being executed, if only they repent at once. His dealings towards them
will depend on theirs towards Him.
spue thee out of my month--reject with righteous loathing, as
Canaan spued out its inhabitants for their abominations. Physicians
used lukewarm water to cause vomiting. Cold and
hot drinks were common at feasts, but never lukewarm.
There were hot and cold springs near Laodicea.
17. Self-sufficiency is the fatal danger of a lukewarm state
(see on
Re 3:15).
thou sayest--virtually and mentally, if not in so many words.
increased with goods--Greek, "have become enriched,"
implying self-praise in self-acquired riches. The Lord alludes to
Ho 12:8.
The riches on which they prided themselves were spiritual riches;
though, doubtless, their spiritual self-sufficiency ("I have need of
nothing") was much fostered by their worldly wealth; as, on the other
hand, poverty of spirit is fostered by poverty in respect
to worldly riches.
knowest not that thou--in particular above all others. The
"THOU" in the Greek is emphatic.
art wretched--Greek, "art the wretched one."
miserable--So one oldest manuscripts reads. But two oldest
manuscripts prefix "the." Translate, "the pitiable"; "the one
especially to be pitied." How different Christ's estimate of men, from
their own estimate of themselves, "I have need of nothing!"
blind--whereas Laodicea boasted of a deeper than common
insight into divine things. They were not absolutely
blind, else eye-salve would have been of no avail to
them; but short-sighted.
18. Gentle and loving irony. Take My advice, thou who
fanciest thyself in need of nothing. Not only art thou not in
need of nothing, but art in need of the commonest necessaries of
existence. He graciously stoops to their modes of thought and speech:
Thou art a people ready to listen to any counsel as to how to
buy to advantage; then, listen to My counsel (for I am
"Counsellor,"
Isa 9:6),
buy of ME" (in whom, according to Paul's
Epistle written to the neighboring Colosse and intended for the
Laodicean Church also,
Col 2:1, 3; 4:16,
are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge). "Buy"
does not imply that we can, by any work or merit of ours,
purchase God's free gift; nay the very purchase money consists
in the renunciation of all self-righteousness, such as Laodicea had
(Re 3:17).
"Buy" at the cost of thine own self-sufficiency (so Paul,
Php 3:7, 8);
and the giving up of all things, however dear to us, that would prevent
our receiving Christ's salvation as a free gift, for
example, self and worldly desires. Compare
Isa 55:1,
"Buy . . . without money and price."
of me--the source of "unsearchable riches"
(Eph 3:8).
Laodicea was a city of extensive money transactions [CICERO].
gold tried in, &c.--literally, "fired (and fresh)
from the fire," that is, just fresh from the furnace
which has proved its purity, and retaining its bright gloss. Sterling
spiritual wealth, as contrasted with its counterfeit, in which Laodicea
boasted itself. Having bought this gold she will be no longer
poor
(Re 3:17).
mayest be rich--Greek, "mayest be enriched."
white raiment--"garments." Laodicea's wools were famous. Christ
offers infinitely whiter raiment. As "gold tried in the fire" expresses
faith tested by fiery trials: so "white raiment," Christ's
righteousness imputed to the believer in justification and imparted
in sanctification.
appear--Greek, "be manifested," namely, at the last day,
when everyone without the wedding garment shall be discovered. To strip
one, is in the East the image of putting to open shame. So also to
clothe one with fine apparel is the image of doing him honor. Man can
discover his shame, God alone can cover it, so that his nakedness shall
not be manifested at last
(Col 3:10-14).
Blessed is he whose sin is so covered. The hypocrite's shame may
be manifested now; it must be so at last.
anoint . . . with eye-salve--The oldest manuscripts
read, "(buy of Me) eye-salve (collyrium, a roll of ointment),
to anoint thine eyes." Christ has for Laodicea an ointment far
more precious than all the costly unguents of the East. The eye
is here the conscience or inner light of the mind. According as it is
sound and "single" (Greek, "haplous," "simple"), or
otherwise, the man sees aright spiritually, or does not. The Holy
Spirit's unction, like the ancient eye-salve's, first smarts with
conviction of sin, then heals. He opens our eyes first to ourselves in
our wretchedness, then to the Saviour in His preciousness. TRENCH notices that the most sunken churches of the
seven, namely, Sardis and Laodicea, are the ones in which alone are
specified no opponents from without, nor heresies from within. The
Church owes much to God's overruling Providence which has made so often
internal and external foes, in spite of themselves, to promote His
cause by calling forth her energies in contending for the faith once
delivered to the saints. Peace is dearly bought at the cost of
spiritual stagnation, where there is not interest enough felt in
religion to contend about it at all.
19.
(Job 5:17;
Pr 3:11, 12;
Heb 12:5, 6.)
So in the case of Manasseh
(2Ch 33:11-13).
As many--All. "He scourgeth every son whom He receiveth. And
shalt thou be an exception? If excepted from suffering the scourge,
thou art excepted from the number of the sons"
[AUGUSTINE]. This is an encouragement to Laodicea
not to despair, but to regard the rebuke as a token for good, if she
profit by it.
I love--Greek, "philo," the love of gratuitous
affection, independent of any grounds for esteem in the object
loved. But in the case of Philadelphia
(Re 3:9),
"I have loved thee" (Greek, "egapesa") with the love of
esteem, founded on the judgment. Compare the note in my
English Gnomon of BENGEL,
Joh 21:15-17.
I rebuke--The "I" in the Greek stands first in the
sentence emphatically. I in My dealings, so altogether unlike man's, in
the case of all whom I love, rebuke. The Greek,
"elencho," is the same verb as in
Joh 16:8,
"(the Holy Ghost) will convince (rebuke unto conviction) the
world of sin."
chasten--"chastise." The Greek, "paideu," which in
classical Greek means to instruct, in the New Testament
means to instruct by chastisement
(Heb 12:5, 6).
David was rebuked unto conviction, when he cried, "I have sinned
against the Lord"; the chastening followed when his child was
taken from him
(2Sa 12:13, 14).
In the divine chastening, the sinner at one and the same time
winces under the rod and learns righteousness.
be zealous--habitually. Present tense in the Greek, of a
lifelong course of zeal. The opposite of "lukewarm." The
Greek by alliteration marks this: Laodicea had not been "hot"
(Greek, "zestos"), she is therefore urged to "be zealous"
(Greek, "zeleue"): both are derived from the same verb,
Greek, "zeo," "to boil."
repent--Greek aorist: of an act to be once for all
done, and done at once.
20. stand--waiting in wonderful condescension and
long-suffering.
knock--
(So 5:2).
This is a further manifestation of His loving desire for the sinner's
salvation. He who is Himself "the Door," and who bids us "knock" that
it may be "opened unto" us, is first Himself to knock at the door of
our hearts. If He did not knock first, we should never come to knock at
His door. Compare
So 5:4-6,
which is plainly alluded to here; the Spirit thus in Revelation sealing
the canonicity of that mystical book. The spiritual state of the bride
there, between waking and sleeping, slow to open the door
to her divine lover, answers to that of the lukewarm Laodicea
here. "Love in regard to men emptied (humbled) God; for He does not
remain in His place and call to Himself the servant whom He loved, but
He comes down Himself to seek him, and He who is all-rich arrives at
the lodging of the pauper, and with His own voice intimates His
yearning love, and seeks a similar return, and withdraws not when
disowned, and is not impatient at insult, and when persecuted still
waits at the doors" [NICOLAUS CABASILAS in TRENCH].
my voice--He appeals to the sinner not only with His hand (His
providences) knocking, but with His voice (His word read
or heard; or rather, His Spirit inwardly applying to man's spirit the
lessons to be drawn from His providence and His word). If we refuse to
answer to His knocking at our door now, He will refuse to hear our
knocking at His door hereafter. In respect to His second coming also,
He is even now at the door, and we know not how soon He may
knock: therefore we should always be ready to open to Him
immediately.
if any man hear--for man is not compelled by irresistible force:
Christ knocks, but does not break open the door, though the
violent take heaven by the force of prayer
(Mt 11:12):
whosoever does hear, does so not of himself, but by the drawings
of God's grace
(Joh 6:44):
repentance is Christ's gift
(Ac 5:31).
He draws, not drags. The Sun of righteousness, like the natural
sun, the moment that the door is opened, pours in His light,
which could not previously find an entrance. Compare HILARY on Psalm 118:19.
I will come in to him--as I did to Zaccheus.
sup with him, and he with me--Delightful reciprocity! Compare
"dwelleth in me, and I in Him,"
Joh 6:56.
Whereas, ordinarily, the admitted guest sups with the admitter, here
the divine guest becomes Himself the host, for He is the bread of life,
and the Giver of the marriage feast. Here again He alludes to the
imagery of
So 4:16,
where the Bride invites Him to eat pleasant fruits, even as He
had first prepared a feast for her, "His fruit was sweet to my taste."
Compare the same interchange,
Joh 21:9-13,
the feast being made up of the viands that Jesus brought, and those
which the disciples brought. The consummation of this blessed
intercommunion shall be at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb, of which
the Lord's Supper is the earnest and foretaste.
21. sit with me in my throne--
(Re 2:26, 27; 20:6;
Mt 19:28; 20:23;
Joh 17:22, 24;
2Ti 2:12).
The same whom Christ had just before threatened to spue out of His
mouth, is now offered a seat with Him on His throne! "The
highest place is within reach of the lowest; the faintest spark of
grace may be fanned into the mightiest flame of love" [TRENCH].
even as I also--Two thrones are here mentioned: (1) His
Father's, upon which He now sits, and has sat since His ascension,
after His victory over death, sin, the world; upon this none can sit
save God, and the God-man Christ Jesus, for it is the incommunicable
prerogative of God alone; (2) the throne which shall be peculiarly
His as the once humbled and then glorified Son of man, to
be set up over the whole earth (heretofore usurped by Satan) at His
coming again; in this the victorious saints shall share
(1Co 6:2).
The transfigured elect Church shall with Christ judge and reign over
the nations in the flesh, and Israel the foremost of them; ministering
blessings to them as angels were the Lord's mediators of blessing and
administrators of His government in setting up His throne in Israel at
Sinai. This privilege of our high calling belongs exclusively to the
present time while Satan reigns, when alone there is scope for conflict
and for victory
(2Ti 2:11, 12).
When Satan shall be bound
(Re 20:4),
there shall be no longer scope for it, for all on earth shall know the
Lord from the least to the greatest. This, the grandest and crowning
promise, is placed at the end of all the seven addresses, to gather all
in one. It also forms the link to the next part of the book, where the
Lamb is introduced seated on His Father's throne
(Re 4:2, 3; 5:5, 6).
The Eastern throne is broad, admitting others besides him who, as
chief, occupies the center. TRENCH notices; The
order of the promises in the seven epistles corresponds to that of the
unfolding of the kingdom of God its first beginnings on earth to its
consummation in heaven. To the faithful at Ephesus: (1) The tree of
life in the Paradise of God is promised
(Re 2:7),
answering to
Ge 2:9.
(2) Sin entered the world and death by sin; but to the faithful at
Smyrna it is promised, they shall not be hurt by the second
death
(Re 2:11).
(3) The promise of the hidden manna
(Re 2:17)
to Pergamos brings us to the Mosaic period, the Church in the
wilderness. (4) That to Thyatira, namely, triumph over the
nations
(Re 2:26, 27),
forms the consummation of the kingdom in prophetic type, the period of
David and Solomon characterized by this power of the nations.
Here there is a division, the seven falling into two groups,
four and three, as often, for example, the Lord's Prayer, three
and four. The scenery of the last three passes from earth to heaven,
the Church contemplated as triumphant, with its steps from glory to
glory. (5) Christ promises to the believer of Sardis not to blot his
name out of the book of life but to confess him before His Father and
the angels at the judgment-day, and clothe him with a glorified body of
dazzling whiteness
(Re 3:4, 5).
(6) To the faithful at Philadelphia Christ promises they shall be
citizens of the new Jerusalem, fixed as immovable pillars there, where
city and temple are one
(Re 3:12);
here not only individual salvation is promised to the believer, as in
the case of Sardis, but also privileges in the blessed communion of the
Church triumphant. (7) Lastly, to the faithful of Laodicea is given the
crowning promise, not only the two former blessings, but a seat with
Christ on His throne, even as He has sat with His Father on His
Father's throne
(Re 3:21).
CHAPTER 4
Re 4:1-11.
VISION OF
GOD'S
THRONE IN
HEAVEN; THE
FOUR AND
TWENTY
ELDERS; THE
FOUR
LIVING
CREATURES.
Here begins the Revelation proper; and first, the fourth and fifth
chapters set before us the heavenly scenery of the succeeding visions,
and God on His throne, as the covenant God of His Church, the
Revealer of them to His apostle through Jesus Christ. The first great
portion comprises the opening of the seals and the sounding of the
trumpets (fourth to eleventh chapters). As the communication respecting
the seven churches opened with a suitable vision of the Lord Jesus as
Head of the Church, so the second part opens with a vision suitable to
the matter to be revealed. The scene is changed from earth to
heaven.
1. After this--Greek, "After these things," marking the
opening of the next vision in the succession. Here is the transition
from "the things which are"
(Re 1:19),
the existing state of the seven churches, as a type of the Church in
general, in John's time, to "the things which shall be hereafter,"
namely, in relation to the time when John wrote.
I looked--rather as Greek, "I saw" in vision; not as
English Version means, I directed my look that way.
was--Omit, as not being in the Greek.
opened--"standing open"; not as though John saw it in the act of
being opened. Compare
Eze 1:1;
Mt 3:16;
Ac 7:56; 10:11.
But in those visions the heavens opened, disclosing the visions to
those below on earth. Whereas here, heaven, the temple of God, remains
closed to those on earth, but John is transported in vision through an
open door up into heaven, whence he can see things passing on earth or
in heaven, according as the scenes of the several visions require.
the first voice which I heard--the voice which I heard at first,
namely, in
Re 1:10;
the former voice.
was as it were--Omit was, it not being in the
Greek. "Behold" governs in sense both "a door," &c., and "the
first voice," &c.
Come up hither--through the "open door."
be--come to pass.
hereafter--Greek, "after these things": after the present
time
(Re 1:19).
2. And--omitted in the two oldest manuscripts, Vulgate,
Syriac.
I was, &c.--Greek, "I became in the Spirit" (see on
Re 1:10):
I was completely rapt in vision into the heavenly world.
was set--not was placed, but was situated,
literally, "lay."
one sat on the throne--the Eternal Father: the Creator
(Re 4:11):
also compare
Re 4:8
with Re 1:4,
where also the Father is designated, "which is, and was, and is to
come." When the Son, "the Lamb," is introduced,
Re 5:5-9,
a new song is sung which distinguishes the Sitter on the
throne from the Lamb, "Thou hast redeemed us to
God," and
Re 5:13,
"Unto Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb." So also in
Re 5:7,
as in
Da 7:13,
the Son of man brought before the Ancient of days is
distinguished from Him. The Father in essence is invisible, but in
Scripture at times is represented as assuming a visible form.
3. was--omitted in the two oldest manuscripts but supported by
Vulgate and Coptic.
to look upon--Greek, "in sight," or "appearance."
jasper--From
Re 21:11,
where it is called most precious, which the jasper was
not, EBRARD infers it was a diamond. Ordinarily,
the jasper is a stone of various wavy colors, somewhat
transparent: in
Re 21:11
it represents watery crystalline brightness. The sardine, our
cornelian, or else a fiery red. As the watery brightness represents
God's holiness, so the fiery red His justice executing fiery wrath. The
same union of white or watery brightness and fiery redness appears in
Re 1:14; 10:1;
Eze 1:4; 8:2;
Da 7:9.
rainbow round about the throne--forming a complete circle (type
of God's perfection and eternity: not a half circle as the earthly
rainbow) surrounding the throne vertically. Its various colors, which
combined form one pure solar ray, symbolize the varied aspects of God's
providential dealings uniting in one harmonious whole. Here, however,
the predominating color among the prismatic colors is green, the most
refreshing of colors to look upon, and so symbolizing God's consolatory
promises in Christ to His people amidst judgments on His foes.
Moreover, the rainbow was the appointed token of God's covenant with
all flesh, and His people in particular. Hereby God in type renewed to
man the grant originally made to the first Adam. The antitype will be
the "new heavens and the new earth" restored to redeemed man, just as
the earth, after the destruction by the flood, was restored to Noah. As
the rainbow was first reflected on the waters of the world's ruin, and
continues to be seen only when a cloud is brought over the earth, so
another deluge, namely, of fire, shall precede the new heavens and
earth: the Lord, as here, on His throne, whence
(Re 4:5)
proceed "lightnings and thunderings," shall issue the commission to rid
the earth of its oppressors: but then, amidst judgment, when other
men's hearts fail them for fear, the believer shall be reassured by the
rainbow, the covenant token, round the throne (compare DE BURGH, Exposition of
Revelation). The heavenly bow speaks of the shipwreck of the world
through sin: it speaks also of calm and sunshine after the storm. The
cloud is the regular token of God's and Christ's presence, for
example, in the tabernacle's holiest place; on Mount Sinai at the
giving of the law; at the ascension
(Ac 1:9);
at His coming again
(Re 4:7).
4. seats--rather as the Greek is translated in this very
verse, "thrones," of course lower and smaller than the grand central
throne. So
Re 16:10,
"the seat (rather, throne) of the beasts," in hellish parody of
God's throne.
four and twenty elders--Greek, "the four and
twenty (or as one oldest manuscript, 'twenty-four') elders": the
well-known elders [ALFORD]. But
TREGELLES translates, "Upon the twenty-four
thrones (I saw: omitted in two oldest manuscripts) elders
sitting": which is more probable, as the twenty-four elders were
not mentioned before, whereas the twenty-four thrones were. They
are not angels, for they have white robes and crowns of
victory, implying a conflict and endurance, "Thou hast redeemed
us": they represent the Heads of the Old and New Testament
churches respectively, the Twelve Patriarchs (compare
Re 7:5-8,
not in their personal, but in their representative character), and
Twelve Apostles. So in
Re 15:3,
"the song of Moses, and of the Lamb," the double
constituents of the Church are implied, the Old Testament and the New
Testament. "Elders" is the very term for the ministry both of
the Old and New Testament, the Jewish and the catholic Gentile Church.
The tabernacle was a "pattern" of the heavenly antitype; the holy
place, a figure of HEAVEN ITSELF. Thus Jehovah's
throne is represented by the mercy seat in the holiest, the
Shekinah-cloud over it. "The seven lamps of fire before the throne"
(Re 4:5)
are antitypical to the seven-branched candlestick also in the holiest,
emblem of the manifold Spirit of God: "the sea of glass"
(Re 4:6)
corresponds to the molten sea before the sanctuary, wherein the priests
washed themselves before entering on their holy service; so introduced
here in connection with the redeemed "priests unto God" (compare
Note, see on
Re 15:2).
The "four living creatures"
(Re 4:6, 7)
answer to the cherubim over the mercy seat. So the twenty-four throned
and crowned elders are typified by the twenty-four chiefs of the
twenty-four courses of priests, "Governors of the sanctuary, and
governors of God"
(1Ch 24:5; 25:1-31).
5. proceeded--Greek, "proceed."
thunderings and voices--The two oldest manuscripts transpose,
"voices and thunderings." Compare at the giving of the law on Sinai,
Ex 19:16.
"The thunderings express God's threats against the ungodly:
there are voices in the thunders
(Re 10:3),
that is, not only does He threaten generally, but also predicts
special judgments" [GROTIUS].
seven lamps . . . seven Spirits--The Holy Spirit in
His sevenfold operation, as the light-and-life Giver (compare
Re 5:6,
seven eyes . . . the seven Spirits of God;
Re 1:4; 21:23;
Ps 119:105)
and fiery purifier of the godly, and consumer of the ungodly
(Mt 3:11).
6. Two oldest manuscripts, A, B, Vulgate, Coptic, and
Syriac read, "As it were a sea of glass."
like . . . crystal--not imperfectly transparent as the
ancient common glass, but like rock crystal. Contrast the turbid "many
waters" on which the harlot "sitteth"
(Re 17:1, 15).
Compare
Job 37:18,
"the sky . . . as a molten looking-glass." Thus, primarily,
the pure ether which separates God's throne from John, and from all
things before it, may be meant, symbolizing the "purity, calmness, and
majesty of God's rule" [ALFORD]. But see the
analogue in the temple, the molten sea before the sanctuary
(see on
Re 4:4,
above). There is in this sea depth and transparency, but not the
fluidity and instability of the natural sea (compare
Re 21:1).
It stands solid, calm, and clear, God's judgments are called "a
great deep"
(Ps 36:6).
In
Re 15:2
it is a "sea of glass mingled with fire." Thus there is
symbolized here the purificatory baptism of water and the Spirit of all
who are made "kings and priests unto God." In
Re 15:2
the baptism with the fire of trial is meant. Through both all the
king-priests have to pass in coming to God: His judgments, which
overwhelm the ungodly, they stand firmly upon, as on a solid sea of
glass; able like Christ to walk on the sea, as though it were solid.
round about the throne--one in the midst of each side of the
throne.
four beasts--The Greek for "beasts,"
Re 13:1, 11,
is different, therion, the symbol for the carnal man by
opposition to God losing his true glory, as lord, under Him, of the
lower creatures, and degraded to the level of the beast. Here it
is zoon, "living creatures"; not beast.
7. calf--"a steer" [ALFORD]. The
Septuagint often uses the Greek term here for an
ox
(Ex 22:1; 29:10,
&c.).
as a man--The oldest manuscripts have "as of a man."
8. about him--Greek, "round about him."
ALFORD connects this with the following sentence:
"All round and within (their wings) they are (so two oldest
manuscripts, A, B, and Vulgate read) full of eyes." John's
object is to show that the six wings in each did not interfere with
that which he had before declared, namely, that they were "full of eyes
before and behind." The eyes were round the outside of each
wing, and up the inside of each when half expanded, and of the
part of body in that inward recess.
rest not--literally, "have no rest." How awfully different the
reason why the worshippers of the beast "have no rest day nor night,"
namely, "their torment for ever and ever."
Holy, holy, holy--The "tris-hagion" of the Greek
liturgies. In
Isa 6:3,
as here, it occurs; also
Ps 99:3, 5, 9,
where He is praised as "holy," (1) on account of His majesty
(Re 4:1)
about to display itself; (2) His justice
(Re 4:4)
already displaying itself; (3) His mercy
(Re 4:6-8)
which displayed itself in times past. So here "Holy," as He "who was";
"Holy," as He "who is": "Holy," as He "who is to come." He showed
Himself an object of holy worship in the past creation of all things:
more fully He shows Himself so in governing all things: He will, in the
highest degree, show Himself so in the consummation of all things. "Of
(from) Him, through Him, and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory
for ever. Amen." In
Isa 6:3
there is added, "the whole EARTH is full of His
glory." But in Revelation this is deferred until the glory of THE LORD fills the earth,
His enemies having been destroyed [BENGEL].
Almighty--answering to "Lord of hosts" (Sabaoth),
Isa 6:3.
The cherubim here have six wings, like the seraphim in
Isa 6:2;
whereas the cherubim in
Eze 1:6
had four wings each. They are called by the same name, "living
creatures." But whereas in Ezekiel each living creature has all four
faces, here the four belong severally one to each. See on
Eze 1:6.
The four living creatures answer by contrast to the four world
powers represented by four beasts. The Fathers identified them
with the four Gospels, Matthew the lion, Mark the ox, Luke the man,
John the eagle: these symbols, thus viewed, express not the personal
character of the Evangelists, but the manifold aspect of Christ
in relation to the world (four being the number significant of
world-wide extension, for example, the four quarters of the world)
presented by them severally: the lion expressing royalty, as
Matthew gives prominence to this feature of Christ; the ox,
laborious endurance, Christ's prominent characteristic in Mark;
man, brotherly sympathy with the whole race of man, Christ's
prominent feature in Luke; the eagle, soaring majesty, prominent
in John's description of Christ as the Divine Word. But here the
context best suits the view which regards the four living
creatures as representing the redeemed election-Church in
its relation of ministering king-priests to God, and ministers of
blessing to the redeemed earth, and the nations on it, and the animal
creation, in which man stands at the head of all, the
lion at the head of wild beasts, the ox at the head of tame
beasts, the eagle at the head of birds and of the creatures of
the waters. Compare
Re 5:8-10,
"Thou hast redeemed us by Thy blood out of every kindred
. . . and hast made us unto our God kings and priests:
and we shall reign on the earth"; and
Re 20:4,
the partakers with Christ of the first resurrection, who conjointly
with Him reign over the redeemed nations that are in the flesh.
Compare as to the happy and willing subjection of the lower animal
world,
Isa 11:6-8; 65:25;
Eze 34:25;
Ho 2:18.
Jewish tradition says the "four standards" under which Israel encamped
in the wilderness, to the east, Judah, to the north, Dan, to the west,
Ephraim, to the south, Reuben, were respectively a lion, an
eagle, an ox, and a man, while in the midst was
the tabernacle containing the Shekinah symbol of the Divine Presence.
Thus we have "the picture of that blessed period when--the earth having
been fitted for being the kingdom of the Father--the court of heaven
will be transferred to earth, and the 'tabernacle of God shall be with
men'
(Re 21:3),
and the whole world will be subject to a never-ending theocracy"
(compare DE BURGH,
Exposition of Revelation). The point of union between the two
views given above is: Christ is the perfect realization of the ideal of
man; Christ is presented in His fourfold aspect in the four Gospels
respectively. The redeemed election-Church similarly, when in and
through Christ (with whom she shall reign) she realizes the ideal of
man, shall combine in herself human perfections having a fourfold
aspect: (1) kingly righteousness with hatred of evil and judicial
equity, answering to the "lion"; (2) laborious diligence in every duty,
the "ox"; (3) human sympathy, the "man"; (4) the contemplation of
heavenly truth, the "eagle." As the high-soaring intelligence, the
eagle, forms the contrasted complement to practical labor, the
ox bound to the soil; so holy judicial vengeance against evil,
the lion springing suddenly and terribly on the doomed, forms
the contrasted complement to human sympathy, the man. In
Isa 6:2
we read, "Each had six wings: with twain he covered his face (in
reverence, as not presuming to lift up his face to God), with
twain he covered his feet (in humility, as not worthy to stand in God's
holy presence), and with twain he did fly [in obedient readiness
to do instantly God's command]."
9-11. The ground of praise here is God's eternity, and
God's power and glory manifested in the creation of all
things for His pleasure. Creation is the foundation of all God's other
acts of power, wisdom, and love, and therefore forms the first theme of
His creatures' thanksgivings. The four living creatures take the lead
of the twenty-four elders, both in this anthem, and in that new
song which follows on the ground of their redemption
(Re 5:8-10).
when--that is, whensoever: as often as. A simultaneous giving of
glory on the part of the beasts, and on the part of the elders.
give--"shall give" in one oldest manuscript.
for ever and ever--Greek, "unto the ages of the
ages."
10. fall--immediately. Greek, "shall fall down":
implying that this ascription of praise shall be repeated onward
to eternity. So also, "shall worship . . .
shall cast their crowns," namely, in acknowledgment that all the
merit of their crowns (not kingly diadems, but the
crowns of conquerors) is due to Him.
11. O Lord--The two oldest manuscripts, A, B, Vulgate,
and Syriac add, "and our God." "Our" by virtue of creation, and
especially redemption. One oldest manuscript, B, and Syriac
insert "the Holy One." But another, A, Vulgate, and
Coptic omit this, as English Version does.
glory, &c.--"the glory . . . the honour
. . . the power."
thou--emphatic in the Greek: "It is
THOU who didst create."
all things--Greek, "the all things": the universe.
for, &c.--Greek, "on account of"; "for the sake of Thy
pleasure," or "will." English Version is good Greek.
Though the context better suits, it was because of Thy will,
that "they were" (so one oldest manuscript, A, Vulgate, Syriac,
and Coptic read, instead of English Version "are":
another oldest manuscript, B, reads, "They were not, and were
created," were created out of nothing), that is, were existing,
as contrasted with their previous non-existence. With God to
will is to effect: to determine is to perform. So in
Ge 1:3,
"Let there be light, and there was light": in Hebrew an
expressive tautology, the same word and tense and letters being used
for "let there be," and "there was," marking the simultaneity and
identity of the will and the effect. D. LONGINUS
[On the Sublime, 9], a heathen, praises this description of
God's power by "the lawgiver of the Jews, no ordinary man," as one
worthy of the theme.
were created--by Thy definite act of creation at a definite
time.
CHAPTER 5
Re 5:1-14.
THE
BOOK WITH
SEVEN
SEALS:
NONE
WORTHY TO
OPEN
IT BUT THE
LAMB:
HE
TAKES
IT AMIDST THE
PRAISES OF THE
REDEEMED, AND OF THE
WHOLE
HEAVENLY
HOST.
1. in, &c.--Greek, "(lying) upon the right hand."
His right hand was open and on it lay the book. On God's part there was
no withholding of His future purposes as contained in the book: the
only obstacle to unsealing it is stated in
Re 5:3
[ALFORD].
book--rather, as accords with the ancient form of books, and
with the writing on the backside, "a roll." The writing on
the back implies fulness and completeness, so that nothing more
needs to be added
(Re 22:18).
The roll, or book, appears from the context to be "the title-deed of
man's inheritance" [DE BURGH] redeemed by Christ, and contains the successive
steps by which He shall recover it from its usurper and obtain actual
possession of the kingdom already "purchased" for Himself and His elect
saints. However, no portion of the roll is said to be unfolded
and read; but simply the seals are successively
opened, giving final access to its contents being read as a
perfect whole, which shall not be until the events symbolized by the
seals shall have been past, when
Eph 3:10
shall receive its complete accomplishment, and the Lamb shall
reveal God's providential plans in redemption in all their manifold
beauties. Thus the opening of the seals will mean the successive steps
by which God in Christ clears the way for the final opening and reading
of the book at the visible setting up of the kingdom of Christ.
Compare, at the grand consummation,
Re 20:12,
"Another book was opened . . . the book of life";
Re 22:19.
None is worthy to do so save the Lamb, for He alone as such has
redeemed man's forfeited inheritance, of which the book is the
title-deed. The question
(Re 5:2)
is not (as commonly supposed), Who should reveal the destinies of the
Church (for this any inspired prophet would be competent to do)? but,
Who has the WORTH to give man a new title to
his lost inheritance? [DE BURGH].
sealed . . . seven seals--Greek, "sealed up,"
or "firmly sealed." The number seven (divided into four, the
world-wide number, and three, the divine) abounds in Revelation and
expresses completeness. Thus, the seven seals,
representing all power given to the Lamb; the seven trumpets, by
which the world kingdoms are shaken and overthrown, and the Lamb's
kingdom ushered in; and the seven vials, by which the beast's
kingdom is destroyed.
2. strong--
(Ps 103:20).
His voice penetrated heaven, earth, and Hades
(Re 10:1-3).
3. no man--Greek, "no one." Not merely no
man, but also no one of any order of beings.
in earth--Greek, "upon the earth."
under the earth--namely, in Hades.
look thereon--to look upon the contents, so as to read them.
4. and to read--inserted in English Version Greek text
without good authority. One oldest manuscript,
ORIGEN, CYPRIAN, and
HILARY omit the clause. "To read" would be awkward
standing between "to open the book" and "to look thereon." John having
been promised a revelation of "things which must be hereafter,"
weeps now at his earnest desire being apparently frustrated. He
is a pattern to us to imitate, as an eager and teachable learner of the
Apocalypse.
5. one of--Greek, "one from among." The "elder" meant is,
according to some (in LYRA), Matthew. With this
accords the description here given of Christ, "the Lion, which
is (so the Greek) of the tribe of Juda, the root of David"; the
royal, David-descended, lion-aspect of Christ being that prominent in
Matthew, whence the lion among the fourfold cherubim is commonly
assigned to him. GERHARD in BENGEL thought Jacob to be meant, being, doubtless, one
of those who rose with Christ and ascended to heaven
(Mt 27:52, 53).
The elders in heaven round God's throne know better than John, still in
the flesh, the far-reaching power of Christ.
Root of David--
(Isa 11:1, 10).
Not merely "a sucker come up from David's ancient root" (as
ALFORD limits it), but also including the idea of
His being Himself the root and origin of David: compare these two
truths brought together,
Mt 22:42-45.
Hence He is called not merely Son of David, but also
David. He is at once "the branch" of David, and "the root" of
David, David's Son and David's Lord, the Lamb slain and
therefore the Lion of Juda: about to reign over Israel, and
thence over the whole earth.
prevailed--Greek, "conquered": absolutely, as elsewhere
(Re 3:21):
gained the victory: His past victory over all the powers of
darkness entitles Him now to open the book.
to open--that is, so as to open. One oldest manuscript,
B, reads, "He that openeth," that is, whose office it is to open, but
the weight of oldest authorities is with English Version
reading, namely, A, Vulgate, Coptic, and ORIGEN.
6. I beheld, and, lo--One oldest manuscript, A, omits "and, lo."
Another, B, CYPRIAN, &c., support, "and, lo," but
omit, "and I beheld."
in the midst of the throne--that is, not on the throne
(compare
Re 5:7),
but in the midst of the company
(Re 4:4)
which was "round about the throne."
Lamb--Greek, "arnion"; always found in Revelation
exclusively, except in
Joh 21:15
alone: it expresses endearment, namely, the endearing relation
in which Christ now stands to us, as the consequence of His previous
relation as the sacrificial Lamb. So also our relation to Him:
He the precious Lamb, we His dear lambs, one with Him.
BENGEL thinks there is in Greek,
"arnion," the idea of taking the lead of the flock.
Another object of the form Greek, "arnion," the Lamb, is
to put Him in the more marked contrast to Greek,
"therion," the Beast. Elsewhere Greek, "amnos," is
found, applying to Him as the paschal, sacrificial Lamb
(Isa 53:7,
Septuagint;
Joh 1:29, 36;
Ac 8:32;
1Pe 1:19).
as it had been slain--bearing marks of His past death wounds. He
was standing, though bearing the marks of one slain. In the midst of
heavenly glory Christ crucified is still the prominent object.
seven horns--that is, perfect might, "seven" symbolizing
perfection; "horns," might, in contrast to the
horns of the Antichristian world powers,
Re 17:3;
&c.; Da 7:7, 20; 8:3.
seven eyes . . . the seven Spirits . . . sent
forth--So one oldest manuscript, A. But B reads, "being sent
forth." As the seven lamps before the throne represent the
Spirit of God immanent in the Godhead, so the seven eyes of the
Lamb represent the same sevenfold Spirit profluent from the incarnate
Redeemer in His world-wide energy. The Greek for "sent forth,"
apostellomena, or else apestalmenoi, is akin to the term
"apostle," reminding us of the Spirit-impelled labors of Christ's
apostles and minister throughout the world: if the present tense be
read, as seems best, the idea will be that of those labors
continually going on unto the end. "Eyes" symbolize His
all-watchful and wise providence for His Church, and against her
foes.
7. The book lay on the open hand of Him that sat on the throne
for any to take who was found worthy [ALFORD]. The
Lamb takes it from the Father in token of formal investiture into His
universal and everlasting dominion as Son of man. This introductory
vision thus presents before us, in summary, the consummation to which
all the events in the seals, trumpets, and vials converge, namely, the
setting up of Christ's kingdom visibly. Prophecy ever hurries to the
grand crisis or end, and dwells on intermediate events only in their
typical relation to, and representation of, the end.
8. had taken--Greek, "took."
fell down before the Lamb--who shares worship and the throne
with the Father.
harps--Two oldest manuscripts, A, B, Syriac and
Coptic read, "a harp": a kind of guitar, played with the hand or
a quill.
vials--"bowls" [TREGELLES]; censers.
odours--Greek, "incense."
prayers of saints--as the angel offers their prayers
(Re 8:3)
with incense (compare
Ps 141:2).
This gives not the least sanction to Rome's dogma of our praying to
saints. Though they be employed by God in some way unknown to us
to present our prayers (nothing is said of their interceding for
us), yet we are told to pray only to Him
(Re 19:10; 22:8, 9).
Their own employment is praise (whence they all have
harps): ours is prayer.
9. sung--Greek, "sing": it is their blessed occupation
continually. The theme of redemption is ever new, ever
suggesting fresh thoughts of praise, embodied in the "new song."
us to God--So manuscript B, Coptic, Vulgate, and CYPRIAN. But A omits "us": and Aleph reads
instead, "to our God."
out of--the present election-church gathered out of the
world, as distinguished from the peoples gathered to Christ as the
subjects, not of an election, but of a general and world-wide
conversion of all nations.
kindred . . . tongue . . . people
. . . nation--The number four marks world-wide
extension: the four quarters of the world. For "kindred," translate as
Greek, "tribe." This term and "people" are usually restricted to
Israel: "tongue and nation" to the Gentiles
(Re 7:9; 11:9; 13:7,
the oldest reading;
Re 14:6).
Thus there is here marked the election-Church gathered from Jews and
Gentiles. In
Re 10:11,
for "tribes," we find among the four terms "kings"; in
Re 17:15,
"multitudes."
10. made us--A, B, Aleph, Vulgate, Syriac, and
Coptic read, "them." The Hebrew construction of the third
person for the first, has a graphic relation to the redeemed,
and also has a more modest sound than us, priests [BENGEL].
unto our God--So B and Aleph read. But A omits the
clause.
kings--So B reads. But A, Aleph, Vulgate, Coptic, and
CYPRIAN, read, "A kingdom." Aleph reads
also "a priesthood" for priests. They who cast their crowns
before the throne, do not call themselves kings in the sight of
the great King
(Re 4:10, 11);
though their priestly access has such dignity that their reigning on
earth cannot exceed it. So in
Re 20:6
they are not called "kings" [BENGEL].
we shall reign on the earth--This is a new feature added to
Re 1:6.
Aleph, Vulgate, and Coptic read, "They shall
reign." A and B read, "They reign." ALFORD
takes this reading and explains it of the Church EVEN
NOW, in Christ her Head, reigning on the earth: "all things are
being put under her feet, as under His; her kingly office and rank are
asserted, even in the midst of persecution." But even if we read (I
think the weightiest authority is against it), "They reign,"
still it is the prophetical present for the future: the seer being
transported into the future when the full number of the redeemed
(represented by the four living creatures) shall be complete and
the visible kingdom begins. The saints do spiritually reign now;
but certainly not as they shall when the prince of this world shall be
bound (see on
Re 20:2-6).
So far from reigning on the earth now, they are "made as the
filth of the world and the offscouring of all things." In
Re 11:15, 18,
the locality and time of the kingdom are marked.
KELLY translates, "reign over the earth"
(Greek, "epi tees gees"), which is justified by the
Greek (Septuagint,
Jud 9:8;
Mt 2:22).
The elders, though ruling over the earth, shall not necessarily
(according to this passage) remain on the earth. But English
Version is justified by
Re 3:10.
"The elders were meek, but the flock of the meek independently
is much larger" [BENGEL].
11. I beheld--the angels: who form the outer circle, while the
Church, the object of redemption, forms the inner circle nearest the
throne. The heavenly hosts ranged around gaze with intense love and
adoration at this crowning manifestation of God's love, wisdom, and
power.
ten thousand times ten thousand--Greek, "myriads of
myriads."
12. to receive power--Greek, "the power." The
remaining six (the whole being seven, the number for
perfection and completeness) are all, as well as "power,"
ranged under the one Greek article, to mark that they form
one complete aggregate belonging to God and His co-equal, the
Lamb. Compare
Re 7:12,
where each of all seven has the article.
riches--both spiritual and earthly.
blessing--ascribed praise: the will on the creature's
part, though unaccompanied by the power, to return blessing for
blessing conferred [ALFORD].
13. The universal chorus of creation, including the outermost
circles as well as the inner (of saints and angels), winds up the
doxology. The full accomplishment of this is to be when Christ
takes His great power and reigns visibly.
every creature--"all His works in all places of His dominion"
(Ps 103:22).
under the earth--the departed spirits in Hades.
such as are--So B and Vulgate. But A omits this.
in the sea--Greek, "upon the sea": the sea animals
which are regarded as being on the surface [ALFORD].
all that are in them--So Vulgate reads. A omits "all
(things)" here (Greek, "panta"), and reads, "I heard all
(Greek, "pantas") saying": implying the harmonious
concert of all in the four quarters of the universe.
Blessing, &c.--Greek, "the blessing, the
honor, and the glory, and the might to the ages of the
ages." The fourfold ascription indicates world-wide
universality.
14. said--So A, Vulgate, and Syriac read. But B
and Coptic read, "(I heard) saying."
Amen--So A reads. But B reads, "the (accustomed) Amen."
As in
Re 4:11,
the four and twenty elders asserted God's worthiness to receive the
glory, as having created all things, so here the four living
creatures ratify by their "Amen" the whole creation's ascription
of the glory to Him.
four and twenty--omitted in the oldest manuscripts:
Vulgate supports it.
him that liveth for ever and ever--omitted in all the
manuscripts: inserted by commentators from
Re 4:9.
But there, where the thanksgiving is expressed, the words are
appropriate; but here less so, as their worship is that of silent
prostration. "Worshipped" (namely, God and the Lamb). So in
Re 11:1,
"worship" is used absolutely.
CHAPTER 6
Re 6:1-17.
THE
OPENING OF THE
FIRST
SIX OF THE
SEVEN
SEALS.
Compare Note, see on
Re 5:1.
Many (MEDE, FLEMING,
NEWTON, &c.) hold that all these seals have been
fulfilled, the sixth having been so by the overthrow of paganism and
establishment of Christianity under Constantine's edict,
A.D. 312. There can, however, be no doubt that at
least the sixth seal is future, and is to be at the coming again of
Christ. The great objection to supposing the seals to be finally and
exhaustively fulfilled (though, probably, particular events may be
partial fulfilments typical of the final and fullest one), is that, if
so, they ought to furnish (as the destruction of Jerusalem, according
to Christ's prophecy, does) a strong external evidence of Revelation.
But it is clear they cannot be used for this, as hardly any two
interpreters of this school are agreed on what events constitute the
fulfilment of each seal. Probably not isolated facts, but
classes of events preparing the way for Christ's coming kingdom,
are intended by the opening of the seals. The four living creatures
severally cry at the opening of the first four seals, "Come," which
fact marks the division of the seven, as often occurs in this
sacred number, into four and three.
1. one of the seals--The oldest manuscripts, A, B, C,
Vulgate, and Syriac read, "one of the seven
seals."
noise--The three oldest manuscripts read this in the nominative
or dative, not the genitive, as English Version, "I heard one
from among the four living creatures saying, as (it were) the
voice (or, 'as with the voice') of thunder." The first
living creature was like a lion
(Re 4:7):
his voice is in consonance. Implying the lion-like boldness with which,
in the successive great revivals, the faithful have testified for
Christ, and especially a little before His coming shall testify.
Or, rather, their earnestness in praying for Christ's coming.
Come and see--One oldest manuscript, B, has "And see." But A, C,
and Vulgate reject it. ALFORD rightly
objects to English Version reading: "Whither was John to come?
Separated as he was by the glassy sea from the throne, was he to cross
it?" Contrast the form of expression,
Re 10:8.
It is much more likely to be the cry of the redeemed to the Redeemer,
"Come" and deliver the groaning creature from the bondage of
corruption. Thus,
Re 6:2
is an answer to the cry, went (literally, "came") forth
corresponding to "Come." "Come," says GROTIUS, is
the living creature's address to John, calling his earnest
attention. But it seems hard to see how "Come" by itself can mean
this. Compare the only other places in Revelation where it is used,
Re 4:1; 22:17.
If the four living creatures represent the four Gospels, the "Come"
will be their invitation to everyone (for it is not written that they
addressed John) to accept Christ's salvation while there
is time, as the opening of the seals marks a progressive step towards
the end (compare
Re 22:17).
Judgments are foretold as accompanying the preaching of the Gospel
as a witness to all nations
(Re 14:6-11;
Mt 24:6-14).
Thus the invitation, "Come," here, is aptly parallel to
Mt 24:14.
The opening of the first four seals is followed by judgments
preparatory for His coming. At the opening of the fifth seal, the
martyrs above express the same
(Re 6:9, 10;
compare
Zec 1:10).
At the opening of the sixth seal, the Lord's coming is ushered in with
terrors to the ungodly. At the seventh, the consummation is fully
attained
(Re 11:15).
2. Evidently Christ, whether in person, or by His angel,
preparatory to His coming again, as appears from
Re 19:11, 12.
bow--
(Ps 45:4, 5).
crown--Greek, "stephanos," the garland or wreath
of a conqueror, which is also implied by His white horse,
white being the emblem of victory. In
Re 19:11, 12
the last step in His victorious progress is represented; accordingly
there He wears many diadems (Greek, "diademata";
not merely Greek, "stephanoi," "crowns" or "wreaths"),
and is personally attended by the hosts of heaven. Compare
Zec 1:7-17; 6:1-8;
especially
Re 6:10
below, with
Zec 1:12;
also compare the colors of the four horses.
and to conquer--that is, so as to gain a lasting victory. All
four seals usher in judgments on the earth, as the power which
opposes the reign of Himself and His Church. This, rather than the work
of conversion and conviction, is primarily meant, though doubtless,
secondarily, the elect will be gathered out through His word and His
judgments.
3. and see--omitted in the three oldest manuscripts, A, B, C,
and Vulgate.
4. red--the color of blood. The color of the horse in
each case answers to the mission of the rider. Compare
Mt 10:24-36,
"Think not I am come to send peace on earth; I came not to send
peace, but a sword." The white horse of Christ's
bloodless victories is soon followed, through man's perversion of the
Gospel, by the red horse of bloodshed; but this is overruled to
the clearing away of the obstacles to Christ's coming kingdom. The
patient ox is the emblem of the second living creature
who, at the opening of this seal, saith, "Come." The saints amidst
judgments on the earth in patience "endure to the end."
that they should kill--The Greek is indicative future,
"that they may, as they also shall, kill one another."
5. Come and see--The two oldest manuscripts, A, C, and
Vulgate omit "and see." B retains the words.
black--implying sadness and want.
had--Greek, "having."
a pair of balances--the symbol of scarcity of provisions, the
bread being doled out by weight.
6. a voice--Two oldest manuscripts, A, C, read, "as it
were a voice." B reads as English Version. The voice is
heard "in the midst of the four living creatures" (as Jehovah in the
Shekinah-cloud manifested His presence between the cherubim); because
it is only for the sake of, and in connection with, His redeemed, that
God mitigates His judgments on the earth.
A measure--"A chœnix." While making food scarce, do not
make it so much so that a chœnix (about a day's provision of
wheat, variously estimated at two or three pints) shall not be
obtainable "for a penny" (denarius, eight and a half pence of
our money, probably the day's wages of a laborer). Famine
generally follows the sword. Ordinarily, from sixteen to twenty
measures were given for a denarius. The sword, famine, noisome
beasts, and the pestilence, are God's four judgments on the
earth. A spiritual famine, too, may be included in the judgment. The
"Come," in the case of this third seal, is said by the third of the
four living creatures, whose likeness is a man indicative of
sympathy and human compassion for the sufferers. God in it tempers
judgment with mercy. Compare
Mt 24:7,
which indicates the very calamities foretold in these seals, nation
rising against nation (the sword), famines, pestilences
(Re 6:8),
and earthquakes
(Re 6:12).
three measures of barley for a penny--the cheaper and less
nutritious grain, bought by the laborer who could not buy enough wheat
for his family with his day's wages, a denarius, and, therefore, buys
barley.
see thou hurt not the oil, and the wine--the luxuries of life,
rather than necessaries; the oil and wine were to be spared for the
refreshment of the sufferers.
7. and see--supported by B; omitted by A, C, and Vulgate.
The fourth living creature, who was "like a flying eagle,"
introduces this seal; implying high-soaring intelligence, and judgment
descending from on high fatally on the ungodly, as the king of birds on
his prey.
8. pale--"livid" [ALFORD].
Death--personified.
Hell--Hades personified.
unto them--Death and Hades. So A, C read. But B
and Vulgate read, "to him."
fourth part of the earth--answering to the first four seals; his
portion as one of the four, being a fourth part.
death--pestilence; compare
Eze 14:21
with the four judgments here, the sword, famine, pestilence, and
wild beasts; the famine the consequence of the sword;
pestilence, that of famine; and beasts multiplying by
the consequent depopulation.
with the beasts--Greek, "by"; more direct agency. These
four seals are marked off from the three last, by the four living
creatures introducing them with "Come." The calamities indicated are
not restricted to one time, but extend through the whole period of
Church history to the coming of Christ, before which last great and
terrible day of the Lord they shall reach highest aggravation. The
first seal is the summary, Christ going forth conquering till
all enemies are subdued under Him, with a view to which the judgments
subsequently specified accompany the preaching of the Gospel for a
witness to all nations.
9. The three last seals relate to the invisible, as the first
four to the visible world; the fifth, to the martyrs who have died as
believers; the sixth, to those who have died, or who shall be found at
Christ's coming, unbelievers, namely, "the kings . . . great
men . . . bondman . . . freeman"; the seventh, to
the silence in heaven. The scene changes from earth to heaven; so that
interpretations which make these three last consecutive to the first
four seals, are very doubtful.
I saw--in spirit. For souls are not naturally visible.
under the altar--As the blood of sacrificial victims slain on
the altar was poured at the bottom of the altar, so the souls of
those sacrificed for Christ's testimony are symbolically represented as
under the altar, in heaven; for the life or animal soul
is in the blood, and blood is often represented as crying for
vengeance
(Ge 4:10).
The altar in heaven, antitypical to the altar of sacrifice, is Christ
crucified. As it is the altar that sanctifies the gift, so it is Christ
alone who makes our obedience, and even our sacrifice of life for the
truth, acceptable to God. The sacrificial altar was not in the
sanctuary, but outside; so Christ's literal sacrifice and the
figurative sacrifice of the martyrs took place, not in the heavenly
sanctuary, but outside, here on earth. The only altar in heaven is that
antitypical to the temple altar of incense. The blood of the martyrs
cries from the earth under Christ's cross, whereon they may be
considered virtually to have been sacrificed; their souls cry from
under the altar of incense, which is Christ in heaven, by whom alone
the incense of praise is accepted before God. They are under
Christ, in His immediate presence, shut up unto Him in joyful eager
expectancy until He shall come to raise the sleeping dead. Compare the
language of
2 Maccabees 7:36
as indicating Jewish opinion on the subject. Our brethren who have now
suffered a short pain are dead under (Greek) God's
covenant of everlasting life.
testimony which they held--that is, which they bore, as
committed to them to bear. Compare
Re 12:17,
"Have (same Greek as here) the testimony of Jesus."
10. How long--Greek, "Until when?" As in the parable the
woman (symbol of the Church) cries day and night to the unjust
judge for justice against her adversary who is always oppressing her
(compare below,
Re 12:10);
so the elect (not only on earth, but under Christ's covering,
and in His presence in Paradise) cry day and night to God, who
will assuredly, in His own time, avenge His and their cause, "though He
bear long with them." These passages need not be
restricted to some particular martyrdoms, but have been, and are
receiving, and shall receive partial fulfilments, until their last
exhaustive fulfilment before Christ's coming. So as to the other events
foretold here. The glory even of those in Paradise will only be
complete when Christ's and the Church's foes are cast out, and the
earth will become Christ's kingdom at His coming to raise the sleeping
saints.
Lord--Greek, "Master"; implying that He has them and
their foes and all His creatures as absolutely at His disposal, as a
master has his slaves; hence, in
Re 6:11,
"fellow servants," or fellow slaves follows.
holy--Greek, "the Holy one."
avenge--"exact vengeance for our blood."
on--Greek, "from them."
that dwell on the earth--the ungodly, of earth, earthly, as
distinguished from the Church, whose home and heart are even now in
heavenly places.
11. white robes--The three oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, read, "A
white robe was given."
every one of--One oldest manuscript, B, omits this. A and C
read, "unto them, unto each," that is, unto them severally. Though
their joint cry for the riddance of the earth from the ungodly is not
yet granted, it is intimated that it will be so in due time; meanwhile,
individually they receive the white robe, indicative of light,
joy, and triumphant victory over their foes; even as the Captain of
their salvation goes forth on a white horse conquering and to
conquer; also of purity and sanctity through Christ. MAIMONIDES says that the Jews used to array priests, when
approved of, in white robes; thus the sense is, they are
admitted among the blessed ones, who, as spotless priests, minister
unto God and the Lamb.
should--So C reads. But A and B, "shall rest."
a little season--One oldest manuscript, B, omits "little." A and
C support it. Even if it be omitted, is it to be inferred that the
"season" is short as compared with eternity? BENGEL fancifully made a season (Greek,
"chronus," the word here used) to be one thousand one hundred
and eleven one-ninth years, and a time
(Re 12:12, 14,
Greek, "kairos") to be a fifth of a season, that
is, two hundred and twenty-two two-ninths years. The only distinction
in the Greek is, a season (Greek,
"chronus") is a sort of aggregate of times. Greek,
"kairos," a specific time, and so of short duration. As to their
rest, compare
Re 14:13
(the same Greek, "anapauomai");
Isa 57:2;
Da 12:13.
until their . . . brethren . . . be
fulfilled--in number. Until their full number shall have been
completed. The number of the elect is definitely fixed: perhaps to fill
up that of the fallen angels. But this is mere conjecture. The
full blessedness and glory of all the saints shall be
simultaneous. The earlier shall not anticipate the later saints. A and
C read, "shall have been accomplished"; B and Aleph read, "shall
have accomplished (their course)."
12. As
Re 6:4, 6-8,
the sword, famine, and pestilence, answer to
Mt 24:6, 7;
Re 6:9, 10,
as to martyrdoms, answer to
Mt 24:9, 10;
so this passage,
Re 6:12, 17,
answers to
Mt 24:29, 30,
"the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and
the stars shall fall from heaven; . . . then shall all the
tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming";
imagery describing the portents of the immediate coming of the
day of the Lord; but not the coming itself until the elect are
sealed, and the judgments invoked by the martyrs descend on the earth,
the sea, and the trees
(Re 7:1-3).
and, lo--So A reads. But B and C omit "lo."
earthquake--Greek, "shaking" of the heavens, the
sea, and the dry land; the shaking of these mutable things being the
necessary preliminary to the setting up of those things which cannot
be shaken. This is one of the catchwords
[WORDSWORTH] connecting the sixth seal with the
sixth trumpet
(Re 11:13)
and the seventh vial
(Re 16:17-21);
also the seventh seal
(Re 8:5).
sackcloth--One kind, made of the "hair" of Cilician goats, was
called "cilicium," or Cilician cloth, and was used for tents, &c. Paul,
a Cilician, made such tents
(Ac 18:3).
moon--A, B, C, and oldest versions read, "the whole moon"; the
full moon; not merely the crescent moon.
as blood--
(Joe 2:31).
13. stars . . . fell . . . as a fig tree casteth
her . . . figs--
(Isa 34:4;
Na 3:12).
The Church shall be then ripe for glorification, the Antichristian
world for destruction, which shall be accompanied with mighty phenomena
in nature. As to the stars falling to the earth, Scripture describes
natural phenomena as they would appear to the spectator, not in the
language of scientific accuracy; and yet, while thus adapting itself to
ordinary men, it drops hints which show that it anticipates the
discoveries of modern science.
14. departed--Greek, "was separated from" its
place; "was made to depart." Not as ALFORD,
"parted asunder"; for, on the contrary, it was rolled
together as a scroll which had been open is rolled up and laid
aside. There is no "asunder one from another" here in the Greek,
as in
Ac 15:39,
which ALFORD copies.
mountain . . . moved out of . . . places--
(Ps 121:1,
Margin;
Jer 3:23; 4:24;
Na 1:5).
This total disruption shall be the precursor of the new earth, just as
the pre-Adamic convulsions prepared it for its present occupants.
15. kings . . . hid themselves--Where was now the
spirit of those whom the world has so greatly feared? [BENGEL].
great men--statesmen and high civil officers.
rich men . . . chief captains--The three oldest
manuscripts, A, B, C, transpose thus, "chief captains . . .
rich men."
mighty--The three oldest manuscripts, A, B, and C read, "strong"
physically
(Ps 33:16).
in--literally "into"; ran into, so as to hide
themselves in.
dens--"caves."
16. from the face--
(Ps 34:16).
On the whole verse, compare
Ho 10:8;
Lu 23:30.
17. Literally, "the day, the great (day)," which can only mean
the last great day. After the Lord has exhausted all His ordinary
judgments, the sword, famine, pestilence, and wild beasts, and still
sinners are impenitent, the great day of the Lord itself' shall come.
Mt 24:6-29
plainly forms a perfect parallelism to the six seals, not only in the
events, but also in the order of their occurrence:
Mt 24:3,
the first seal;
Mt 24:6,
the second seal;
Mt 24:7,
the third seal;
Mt 24:7,
end, the fourth seal;
Mt 24:9,
the fifth seal, the persecutions and abounding iniquity under which, as
well as consequent judgments accompanied with gospel preaching to all
nations as a witness, are particularly detailed,
Mt 24:9-28;
Mt 24:29,
the sixth seal.
to stand--to stand justified, and not condemned before the
Judge. Thus the sixth seal brings us to the verge of the Lord's
coming. The ungodly "tribes of the earth" tremble at the signs of His
immediate approach. But before He actually inflicts the blow in person,
"the elect" must be "gathered "out.
CHAPTER 7
Re 7:1-17.
SEALING OF THE
ELECT OF
ISRAEL.
THE
COUNTLESS
MULTITUDE OF THE
GENTILE
ELECT.
1. And--so B and Syriac. But A, C, Vulgate, and
Coptic omit "and."
after these things--A, B, C, and Coptic read, "after
this." The two visions in this chapter come in as an episode
after the sixth seal, and before the seventh seal. It is clear
that, though "Israel" may elsewhere designate the spiritual Israel,
"the elect (Church) on earth" [ALFORD], here,
where the names of the tribes one by one are specified, these names
cannot have any but the literal meaning. The second advent will be the
time of the restoration of the kingdom to Israel, when the
times of the Gentiles shall have been fulfilled, and the Jews shall
at last say, "Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord." The
period of the Lord's absence has been a blank in the history of the
Jews as a nation. As then Revelation is the Book of the Second Advent
[DE BURGH], naturally mention
of God's restored favor to Israel occurs among the events that usher in
Christ's advent.
earth . . . sea . . . tree--The judgments to
descend on these are in answer to the martyrs' prayer under the
fifth seal. Compare the same judgments under the fifth
trumpet, the sealed being exempt
(Re 9:4).
on any tree--Greek, "against any tree"
(Greek, "epi ti dendron": but "on the earth,"
Greek, "epi tees gees").
2. from the east--Greek, "the rising of the sun." The
quarter from which God's glory oftenest manifests itself.
3. Hurt not--by letting loose the destructive winds.
till we have sealed the servants of our God--parallel to
Mt 24:31,
"His angels . . . shall gather together His elect from the
four winds." God's love is such, that He cannot do anything in
the way of judgment, till His people are secured from hurt
(Ge 19:22).
Israel, at the eve of the Lord's coming, shall be found re-embodied as
a nation; for its tribes are distinctly specified (Joseph, however,
being substituted for Dan; whether because Antichrist is to come from
Dan, or because Dan is to be Antichrist's especial tool [ARETAS, tenth century], compare
Ge 49:17;
Jer 8:16;
Am 8:14;
just as there was a Judas among the Twelve). Out of these tribes a
believing remnant will be preserved from the judgments which shall
destroy all the Antichristian confederacy
(Re 6:12-17),
and shall be transfigured with the elect Church of all nations,
namely, 144,000 (or whatever number is meant by this symbolical
number), who shall faithfully resist the seductions of Antichrist,
while the rest of the nation, restored to Palestine in unbelief, are
his dupes, and at last his victims. Previously to the Lord's judgments
on Antichrist and his hosts, these latter shall destroy
two-thirds of the nation, one-third escaping, and, by the
Spirit's operation through affliction, turning to the Lord, which
remnant shall form the nucleus on earth of the Israelite nation that is
from this time to stand at the head of the millennial nations of the
world. Israel's spiritual resurrection shall be "as life from the dead"
to all the nations. As now a regeneration goes on here and there of
individuals, so there shall then be a regeneration of nations
universally, and this in connection with Christ's coming.
Mt 24:34;
"this generation (the Jewish nation) shall not pass till all these
things be fulfilled," which implies that Israel can no more pass
away before Christ's advent, than Christ's own words can
pass away (the same Greek),
Mt 24:35.
So exactly
Zec 13:8, 9; 14:2-4, 9-21;
compare
Zec 12:2-14; 13:1, 2.
So also
Eze 8:17, 18; 9:1-7,
especially
Eze 9:4.
Compare also
Eze 10:2
with Re 8:5,
where the final judgments actually fall on the earth, with the same
accompaniment, the fire of the altar cast into the earth,
including the fire scattered over the city. So again,
Re 14:1,
the same 144,000 appear on Zion with the Father's name in their
forehead, at the close of the section, the twelfth through fourteenth
chapters, concerning the Church and her foes. Not that the saints are
exempt from trial:
Re 7:14
proves the contrary; but their trials are distinct from the
destroying judgments that fall on the world; from these they are
exempted, as Israel was from the plagues of Egypt, especially from the
last, the Israelite doors having the protecting seal of the blood-mark.
foreheads--the most conspicuous and noblest part of man's body;
on which the helmet, "the hope of salvation," is worn.
4. Twelve is the number of the tribes, and appropriate to
the Church: three by four: three, the divine number,
multiplied by four, the number for world-wide extension. Twelve
by twelve implies fixity and completeness, which is taken a
thousandfold in 144,000. A thousand implies the world
perfectly pervaded by the divine; for it is ten, the world
number, raised to the power of three, the number of God.
of all the tribes--literally, "out of every tribe"; not 144,000
of each tribe, but the aggregate of the twelve thousand from every
tribe.
children--Greek, "sons of Israel."
Re 3:12; 21:12,
are no objection, as ALFORD thinks, to the literal
Israel being meant; for, in consummated glory, still the Church will be
that "built on the foundation of the (Twelve) apostles
(Israelites), Jesus Christ (an Israelite) being the chief
corner-stone." Gentile believers shall have the name of Jerusalem
written on them, in that they shall share the citizenship
antitypical to that of the literal Jerusalem.
5-8. Judah (meaning praise) stands first, as Jesus'
tribe. Benjamin, the youngest, is last; and with him is associated
second last, Joseph. Reuben, as originally first-born, comes next after
Judah, to whom it gave place, having by sin lost its primogeniture
right. Besides the reason given above (see on
Re 7:2),
another akin for the omission of Dan, is, its having been the first to
lapse into idolatry
(Jud 18:1-31);
for which same reason the name Ephraim, also (compare
Jud 17:1-3;
Ho 4:17),
is omitted, and Joseph substituted. Also, it had been now for long
almost extinct. Long before, the Hebrews say [GROTIUS], it was reduced to the one family of Hussim,
which perished subsequently in the wars before Ezra's time. Hence it is
omitted in the fourth through eighth chapters of First Chronicles.
Dan's small numbers are joined here to Naphtali's, whose brother he was
by the same mother [BENGEL]. The twelve times
twelve thousand sealed ones of Israel are the nucleus of transfigured
humanity [AUBERLEN], to which the elect Gentiles
are joined, "a multitude which no man could number,"
Re 7:9
(that is, the Church of Jews and Gentiles indiscriminately, in which
the Gentiles are the predominant element,
Lu 21:24.
The word "tribes," Greek, implies that believing
Israelites are in this countless multitude). Both are in
heaven, yet ruling over the earth, as ministers of blessing to its
inhabitants: while upon earth the world of nations is added to the
kingdom of Israel. The twelve apostles stand at the head of the whole.
The upper and the lower congregation, though distinct, are intimately
associated.
9. no man--Greek, "no one."
of all nations--Greek, "OUT OF
every nation." The human race is "one nation" by origin,
but afterwards separated itself into tribes, peoples, and
tongues; hence, the one singular stands first, followed by the
three plurals.
kindreds--Greek, "tribes."
people--Greek, "peoples." The "first-fruits unto the
Lamb," the 144,000
(Re 14:1-4)
of Israel, are followed by a copious harvest of all nations, an
election out of the Gentiles, as the 144,000 are an election out
of Israel (see on
Re 7:3).
white robes--(See on
Re 6:11;
also
Re 3:5, 18; 4:4).
palms in . . . hands--the antitype to Christ's entry
into Jerusalem amidst the palm-bearing multitude. This shall be just
when He is about to come visibly and take possession of His kingdom.
The palm branch is the symbol of joy and triumph. It was used at
the feast of tabernacles, on the fifteenth day of the seventh month,
when they kept feast to God in thanksgiving for the ingathered fruits.
The antitype shall be the completed gathering in of the harvest of the
elect redeemed here described. Compare
Zec 14:16,
whence it appears that the earthly feast of tabernacles will be
renewed, in commemoration of Israel's preservation in her long
wilderness-like sojourn among the nations from which she shall now be
delivered, just as the original typical feast was to commemorate her
dwelling for forty years in booths or tabernacles in the literal
wilderness.
10. cried--Greek, "cry," in the three oldest manuscripts,
A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic. It is their
continuing, ceaseless employment.
Salvation--literally, "THE salvation"; all
the praise of our salvation be ascribed to our God. At the Lord's entry
into Jerusalem, the type, similarly "salvation" is the cry of the
palm-bearing multitudes. Hosanna means "save us now"; taken from
Ps 118:25,
in which Psalm
(Ps 118:14, 15, 21, 26)
the same connection occurs between salvation, the
tabernacles of the righteous, and the Jews' cry to be repeated
by the whole nation at Christ's coming, "Blessed be He that cometh in
the name of the Lord."
11. The angels, as in
Re 5:11,
in their turn take up the anthem of praise. There it was "many
angels," here it is "all the angels."
stood--"were standing" [ALFORD].
12. Greek, "The blessing, the glory,
the wisdom, the thanksgiving, the honor,
the power, the might [the doxology is sevenfold,
implying its totality and completeness], unto the ages of the
ages."
13. answered--namely, to my thoughts; spoke, asking the question
which might have been expected to arise in John's mind from what has
gone before. One of the twenty-four elders, representing the Old and
New Testament ministry, appropriately acts as interpreter of this
vision of the glorified Church.
What, &c.--Greek order, "These which are arrayed in white
robes, WHO are they?"
14. Sir--Greek, "Lord." B, C, Vulgate, Syriac,
Coptic versions, and CYPRIAN read, "My Lord."
A omits "My," as English Version.
thou knowest--taken from
Eze 37:3.
Comparatively ignorant ourselves of divine things, it is well for us to
look upward for divinely communicated knowledge.
came--rather as Greek, "come"; implying that they are
just come.
great tribulation--Greek, "THE great
tribulation"; "the tribulation, the great one," namely, the
tribulation to which the martyrs were exposed under the fifth seal, the
same which Christ foretells as about to precede His coming
(Mt 24:21,
great tribulation), and followed by the same signs as the sixth
seal
(Mt 24:29, 30),
compare
Da 12:1;
including also retrospectively all the tribulation which the
saints of all ages have had to pass through. Thus this seventh chapter
is a recapitulation of the vision of the six seals,
Re 6:1-17,
to fill up the outline there given in that part of it which affects the
faithful of that day. There, however, their number was waiting to be
completed, but here it is completed, and they are seen taken out of the
earth before the judgments on the Antichristian apostasy; with their
Lord, they, and all His faithful witnesses and disciples of past ages,
wait for His coming and their coming to be glorified and reign together
with Him. Meanwhile, in contrast with their previous sufferings, they
are exempt from the hunger, thirst, and scorching heats of their life
on earth
(Re 7:16),
and are fed and refreshed by the Lamb of God Himself
(Re 7:17; 14:1-4, 13);
an earnest of their future perfect blessedness in both body and soul
united
(Re 21:4-6; 22:1-5).
washed . . . robes . . . white in the blood of
. . . Lamb--
(Re 1:5;
Isa 1:18;
Heb 9:14;
1Jo 1:7;
compare
Isa 61:10;
Zec 3:3-5).
Faith applies to the heart the purifying blood; once for all for
justification, continually throughout the life for sanctification.
15. Therefore--because they are so washed white; for without it
they could never have entered God's holy heaven;
Re 22:14,
"Blessed are those who wash their robes (the oldest manuscripts
reading), that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter
in through the gates into the city";
Re 21:27;
Eph 5:26, 27.
before--Greek, "in the presence of."
Mt 5:8;
1Co 13:12,
"face to face."
throne . . . temple--These are connected because we
can approach the heavenly King only through priestly mediation;
therefore, Christ is at once King and Priest on His throne.
day and night--that is, perpetually; as those approved of as
priests by the Sanhedrim were clothed in white, and kept by turns a
perpetual watch in the temple at Jerusalem; compare as to the singers,
1Ch 9:33,
"day and night";
Ps 134:1.
Strictly "there is no night" in the heavenly sanctuary
(Re 22:5).
in his temple--in what is the heavenly analogue to His temple on
earth, for strictly there is "no temple therein"
(Re 21:22),
"God and the Lamb are the temple" filling the whole, so that there is
no distinction of sacred and secular places; the city is the temple,
and the temple the city. Compare
Re 4:8,
"the four living creatures rest not day and night, saying,
Holy," &c.
shall dwell among them--rather (Greek, "scenosei ep'
autous"), "shall be the tabernacle over them" (compare
Re 21:3;
Le 26:11,
especially
Isa 4:5, 6; 8:14; 25:4;
Eze 37:27).
His dwelling among them is to be understood as a secondary
truth, besides what is expressed, namely, His being their covert. When
once He tabernacled among us as the Word made flesh, He was in
great lowliness; then He shall be in great glory.
16.
(Isa 49:10).
hunger no more--as they did here.
thirst any more--
(Joh 4:13).
the sun--literally, scorching in the East. Also, symbolically,
the sun of persecution.
neither . . . light--Greek, "by no means at all
. . . light" (fall).
heat--as the sirocco.
17. in the midst of the throne--that is, in the middle point in
front of the throne
(Re 5:6).
feed--Greek, "tend as a shepherd."
living fountains of water--A, B, Vulgate, and
CYPRIAN read, (eternal) "life's fountains
of waters." "Living" is not supported by the old authorities.
CHAPTER 8
Re 8:1-13.
SEVENTH
SEAL.
PREPARATION FOR THE
SEVEN
TRUMPETS.
THE
FIRST
FOUR AND THE
CONSEQUENT
PLAGUES.
1. was--Greek, "came to pass"; "began to be."
silence in heaven about . . . half an hour--The last
seal having been broken open, the book of God's eternal plan of
redemption is opened for the Lamb to read to the blessed ones in
heaven. The half hour's silence contrasts with the previous
jubilant songs of the great multitude, taken up by the
angels
(Re 7:9-11).
It is the solemn introduction to the employments and enjoyments of the
eternal Sabbath-rest of the people of God, commencing with the Lamb's
reading the book heretofore sealed up, and which we cannot know till
then. In
Re 10:4,
similarly at the eve of the sounding of the seventh trumpet, when the
seven thunders uttered their voices, John is forbidden to write them.
The seventh trumpet
(Re 11:15-19)
winds up God's vast plan of providence and grace in redemption, just as
the seventh seal brings it to the same consummation. So also the
seventh vial,
Re 16:17.
Not that the seven seals, the seven trumpets, and the seven vials,
though parallel, are repetitions. They each trace the course of divine
action up to the grand consummation in which they all meet, under a
different aspect. Thunders, lightnings, an earthquake, and
voices close the seven thunders and the seven seals alike
(compare
Re 8:5,
with Re 11:19).
Compare at the seventh vial, the voices, thunders, lightnings, and
earthquake,
Re 16:18.
The half-hour silence is the brief pause GIVEN
TO JOHN between the preceding vision and
the following one, implying, on the one hand, the solemn introduction
to the eternal sabbatism which is to follow the seventh seal; and, on
the other, the silence which continued during the incense-accompanied
prayers which usher in the first of the seven trumpets
(Re 8:3-5).
In the Jewish temple, musical instruments and singing resounded during
the whole time of the offering of the sacrifices, which formed the
first part of the service. But at the offering of incense, solemn
silence was kept ("My soul waiteth upon God,"
Ps 62:1;
"is silent," Margin;
Ps 65:1,
Margin), the people praying secretly all the time. The
half-hour stillness implies, too, the earnest adoring
expectation with which the blessed spirits and the angels await the
succeeding unfolding of God's judgments. A short space is
implied; for even an hour is so used
(Re 17:12; 18:10, 19).
2. the seven angels--Compare the apocryphal
Tobit 12:15,
"I am Raphael, one of the seven holy angels which present the prayers
of the saints, and which go in and out before the glory of the Holy
One." Compare
Lu 1:19,
"I am Gabriel, that stand in the presence of God."
stood--Greek, "stand."
seven trumpets--These come in during the time while the martyrs
rest until their fellow servants also, that should be killed as they
were, should be fulfilled; for it is the inhabiters of the
earth on whom the judgments fall, on whom also the martyrs prayed
that they should fall
(Re 6:10).
All the ungodly, and not merely some one portion of them, are
meant, all the opponents and obstacles in the way of the kingdom of
Christ and His saints, as is proved by
Re 11:15, 18,
end, at the close of the seven trumpets. The Revelation becomes more
special only as it advances farther
(Re 13:1-18; 16:10; 17:18).
By the seven trumpets the world kingdoms are overturned to make way for
Christ's universal kingdom. The first four are connected together; and
the last three, which alone have Woe, woe, woe
(Re 8:7-13).
3. another angel--not Christ, as many think; for He, in
Revelation, is always designated by one of His proper titles; though,
doubtless, He is the only true High Priest, the Angel of the Covenant,
standing before the golden altar of incense, and there, as Mediator,
offering up His people's prayers, rendered acceptable before God
through the incense of His merit. Here the angel acts merely as a
ministering spirit
(Heb 1:4),
just as the twenty-four elders have vials full of odors, or
incense, which are the prayers of saints
(Re 5:8),
and which they present before the Lamb. How precisely their ministry,
in perfuming the prayers of the saints and offering them on the altar
of incense, is exercised, we know not, but we do know they are not to
be prayed TO. If we send an offering of tribute to
the king, the king's messenger is not allowed to appropriate what is
due to the king alone.
there was given unto him--The angel does not provide the
incense; it is given to him by Christ, whose meritorious
obedience and death are the incense, rendering the saints' prayers well
pleasing to God. It is not the saints who give the angel the incense;
nor are their prayers identified with the incense; nor do they offer
their prayers to him. Christ alone is the Mediator through whom, and
to whom, prayer is to be offered.
offer it with the prayers--rather as Greek, "give
it TO the prayers," so rendering them efficacious
as a sweet-smelling savor to God. Christ's merits alone can thus
incense our prayers, though the angelic ministry be employed to
attach this incense to the prayers. The saints' praying on earth, and
the angel's incensing in heaven, are simultaneous.
all saints--The prayers both of the saints in the heavenly rest,
and of those militant on earth. The martyrs' cry is the foremost, and
brings down the ensuing judgments.
golden altar--antitype to the earthly.
4. the smoke . . . which came with the prayers
. . . ascended up--rather, "the smoke of the incense
FOR (or 'given TO':
'given' being understood from
Re 8:3)
the prayers of the saints ascended up, out of the angel's hand, in the
presence of Gods" The angel merely burns the incense given him by
Christ the High Priest, so that its smoke blends with the ascending
prayers of the saints. The saints themselves are priests; and the
angels in this priestly ministration are but their fellow
servants
(Re 19:10).
5. cast it into the earth--that is, unto the earth: the
hot coals off the altar cast on the earth, symbolize God's fiery
judgments about to descend on the Church's foes in answer to the
saints' incense-perfumed prayers which have just ascended before God,
and those of the martyrs. How marvellous the power of the saints'
prayers!
there were--"there took place," or "ensued."
voices, and thunderings, and lightnings--B places the "voices"
after "thunderings." A places it after "lightnings."
6. sound--blow the trumpets.
7. The common feature of the first four trumpets is, the
judgments under them affect natural objects, the accessories of
life, the earth, trees, grass, the sea, rivers, fountains, the light of
the sun, moon, and stars. The last three, the woe-trumpets
(Re 8:13),
affect men's life with pain, death, and hell. The language is evidently
drawn from the plagues of Egypt, five or six out of the ten exactly
corresponding: the hail, the fire
(Ex 9:24),
the WATER turned to blood
(Ex 7:19),
the darkness
(Ex 10:21),
the locusts
(Ex 10:12),
and perhaps the death
(Re 9:18).
Judicial retribution in kind characterizes the inflictions of the first
four, those elements which had been abused punishing their abusers.
mingled with--A, B, and Vulgate read, Greek,
". . . IN blood." So in the case of the
second and third vials
(Re 16:3, 4).
upon the earth--Greek, "unto the earth." A, B,
Vulgate, and Syriac add, "And the third of the earth was
burnt up." So under the third trumpet, the third of the rivers
is affected: also, under the sixth trumpet, the third part of
men are killed. In
Zec 13:8, 9
this tripartite division appears, but the proportions reversed, two
parts killed, only a third preserved. Here, vice versa, two-thirds
escape, one-third is smitten. The fire was the predominant element.
all green grass--no longer a third, but all is burnt
up.
8. as it were--not literally a mountain: a mountain-like burning
mass. There is a plain allusion to
Jer 51:25;
Am 7:4.
third part of the sea became blood--In the parallel second vial,
the whole sea (not merely a third) becomes blood.
The overthrow of Jericho, the type of the Antichristian Babylon, after
which Israel, under Joshua (the same name as Jesus),
victoriously took possession of Canaan, the type of Christ's and His
people's kingdom, is perhaps alluded to in the
SEVEN trumpets, which end in the overthrow
of all Christ's foes, and the setting up of His kingdom. On the
seventh day, at the seventh time, when the seven
priests blew the seven ram's horn trumpets, the people shouted,
and the walls fell flat: and then ensued the blood-shedding of
the foe. A mountain-like fiery mass would not naturally change water
into blood; nor would the third part of ships be thereby
destroyed.
9. The symbolical interpreters take the ships here to be
churches. For the Greek here for ships is not the common
one, but that used in the Gospels of the apostolic vessel in which
Christ taught: and the first churches were in the shape of an inverted
ship: and the Greek for destroyed is also used of
heretical corruptings
(1Ti 6:5).
10. a lamp--a torch.
11. The symbolizers interpret the star fallen from heaven
as a chief minister (ARIUS, according to
BULLINGER, BENGEL, and
others; or some future false teacher, if, as is more likely, the event
be still future) falling from his high place in the Church, and instead
of shining with heavenly light as a star, becoming a torch lit
with earthly fire and smouldering with smoke. And "wormwood," though
medicinal in some cases, if used as ordinary water would not only be
disagreeable to the taste, but also fatal to life: so "heretical
wormwood changes the sweet Siloas of Scripture into deadly Marahs"
[WORDSWORTH]. Contrast the converse change of
bitter Marah water into sweet,
Ex 15:23.
ALFORD gives as an illustration in a physical
point of view, the conversion of water into firewater or
ardent spirits, which may yet go on to destroy even as many as a
third of the ungodly in the latter days.
12. third part--not a total obscuration as in the sixth
seal
(Re 6:12, 13).
This partial obscuration, therefore, comes between the prayers
of the martyrs under the fifth seal, and the last overwhelming
judgments on the ungodly under the sixth seal, at the eve of Christ's
coming.
the night likewise--withdrew a third part of the light which the
bright Eastern moon and stars ordinarily afford.
13. an angel--A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic
read for "angel," which is supported by none of the oldest manuscripts,
"an eagle": the symbol of judgment descending fatally from on high; the
king of birds pouncing on the prey. Compare this fourth trumpet and the
flying eagle with the fourth seal introduced by the fourth
living creature, "like a flying eagle,"
Re 4:7; 6:7, 8:
the aspect of Jesus as presented by the fourth Evangelist. John
is compared in the cherubim (according to the primitive interpretation)
to a flying eagle: Christ's divine majesty in this similitude is
set forth in the Gospel according to John, His judicial
visitations in the Revelation of John. Contrast "another angel," or
messenger, with "the everlasting Gospel,"
Re 14:6.
through the midst of heaven--Greek, "in the mid-heaven,"
that is, in the part of the sky where the sun reaches the
meridian: in such a position as that the eagle is an object
conspicuous to all.
the inhabiters of the earth--the ungodly, the "men of the
world," whose "portion is in this life," upon whom the martyrs had
prayed that their blood might be avenged
(Re 6:10).
Not that they sought personal revenge, but their zeal was for the honor
of God against the foes of God and His Church.
the other--Greek, "the remaining voices."
CHAPTER 9
Re 9:1-21.
THE
FIFTH
TRUMPET:
THE
FALLEN
STAR
OPENS THE
ABYSS
WHENCE
ISSUE
LOCUSTS.
THE
SIXTH
TRUMPET.
FOUR
ANGELS AT THE
EUPHRATES
LOOSED.
1. The last three trumpets of the seven are called, from
Re 8:13,
the woe-trumpets.
fall--rather as Greek, "fallen." When John saw it, it was
not in the act of falling, but had fallen already. This
is a connecting link of this fifth trumpet with
Re 12:8, 9, 12,
"Woe to the inhabiters of the earth, for the devil is
come down," &c. Compare
Isa 14:12,
"How art thou fallen from heaven, Lucifer, son of the morning!"
the bottomless pit--Greek, "the pit of the abyss";
the orifice of the hell where Satan and his demons dwell.
3. upon--Greek, "unto," or "into."
as the scorpions of the earth--as contrasted with the "locusts"
which come up from hell, and are not "of the earth."
have power--namely, to sting.
4. not hurt the grass . . . neither . . . green
thing . . . neither . . . tree--the food on
which they ordinarily prey. Therefore, not natural and ordinary
locusts. Their natural instinct is supernaturally restrained to mark
the judgment as altogether divine.
those men which--Greek, "the men whosoever."
in, &c.--Greek, "upon their forehead." Thus this
fifth trumpet is proved to follow the sealing in
Re 7:1-8,
under the sixth seal. None of the saints are hurt by these locusts,
which is not true of the saints in Mohammed's attack, who is supposed
by many to be meant by the locusts; for many true believers fell in the
Mohammedan invasions of Christendom.
5. they . . . they--The subject changes: the first
"they" is the locusts; the second is the unsealed.
five months--the ordinary time in the year during which locusts
continue their ravages.
their torment--the torment of the sufferers. This fifth
verse and
Re 9:6
cannot refer to an invading army. For an army would kill, and
not merely torment.
6. shall desire--Greek, "eagerly desire"; set their mind
on.
shall flee--So B, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic
read. But A and Aleph read, "fleeth," namely continually. In
Re 6:16,
which is at a later stage of God's judgments, the ungodly seek
annihilation, not from the torment of their suffering, but from fear of
the face of the Lamb before whom they have to stand.
7. prepared unto battle--Greek, "made ready unto war."
Compare Note, see on
Joe 2:4,
where the resemblance of locusts to horses is traced: the plates of a
horse armed for battle are an image on a larger scale of the outer
shell of the locust.
crowns--
(Na 3:17).
ELLIOTT explains this of the turbans of
Mohammedans. But how could turbans be "like gold?"
ALFORD understands it of the head of the locusts
actually ending in a crown-shaped fillet which resembled gold in its
material.
as the faces of men--The "as" seems to imply the locusts here do
not mean men. At the same time they are not natural locusts, for
these do not sting men
(Re 9:5).
They must be supernatural.
8. hair of women--long and flowing. An Arabic proverb compares
the antlers of locusts to the hair of girls. EWALD
in ALFORD understands the allusion to be to the
hair on the legs or bodies of the locusts: compare "rough
caterpillars,"
Jer 51:27.
as the teeth of lions--
(Joe 1:6,
as to locusts).
9. as it were breastplates of iron--not such as forms the thorax
of the natural locust.
as . . . chariots--
(Joe 2:5-7).
battle--Greek, "war."
10. tails like unto scorpions--like unto the tails of
scorpions.
and there were stings--There is no oldest manuscript for this
reading. A, B, Aleph, Syriac, and Coptic read, "and
(they have) stings: and in their tails (is) their power (literally,
'authority': authorized power) to hurt."
11. And--so Syriac. But A, B, and Aleph, omit
"and."
had--Greek, "have."
a king . . . which is the angel--English
Version, agreeing with A, Aleph, reads the (Greek)
article before "angel," in which reading we must translate, "They have
as king over them the angel," &c. Satan (compare
Re 9:1).
Omitting the article with B, we must translate, "They have as king
an angel," &c.: one of the chief demons under Satan: I prefer
from
Re 9:1,
the former.
bottomless pit--Greek, "abyss."
Abaddon--that is, perdition or destruction
(Job 26:6;
Pr 27:20).
The locusts are supernatural instruments in the hands of Satan to
torment, and yet not kill, the ungodly, under this fifth trumpet. Just
as in the case of godly Job, Satan was allowed to torment with
elephantiasis, but not to touch his life. In
Re 9:20,
these two woe-trumpets are expressly called "plagues." ANDREAS OF CÆSAREA,
A.D. 500, held, in his Commentary on
Revelation, that the locusts mean evil spirits again
permitted to come forth on earth and afflict men with various
plagues.
12. Greek, "The one woe."
hereafter--Greek, "after these things." I agree with
ALFORD and DE
BURGH, that these locusts from the abyss
refer to judgments about to fall on the ungodly immediately before
Christ's second advent. None of the interpretations which regard them
as past, are satisfactory.
Joe 1:2-7; 2:1-11,
is strictly parallel and expressly refers
(Joe 2:11)
to THE DAY OF THE LORD GREAT AND
VERY TERRIBLE:
Joe 2:10
gives the portents accompanying the day of the Lord's coming, the
earth quaking, the heavens trembling, the sun, moon, and stars,
withdrawing their shining:
Joe 2:18, 31, 32,
also point to the immediately succeeding deliverance of Jerusalem:
compare also, the previous last conflict in the valley of Jehoshaphat,
and the dwelling of God thenceforth in Zion, blessing Judah. DE BURGH confines the locust
judgment to the Israelite land, even as the sealed in
Re 7:1-8
are Israelites: not that there are not others sealed as elect in the
earth; but that, the judgment being confined to Palestine,
the sealed of Israel alone needed to be expressly excepted from
the visitation. Therefore, he translates throughout, "the land" (that
is, of Israel and Judah), instead of "the earth." I incline to agree
with him.
13. a voice--literally, "one voice."
from--Greek, "out of."
the four horns--A, Vulgate (Amiatinus manuscript),
Coptic, and Syriac omit "four." B and
CYPRIAN support it. The four horns together
gave forth their voice, not diverse, but one. God's revelation
(for example, the Gospel), though in its aspects fourfold (four
expressing world-wide extension: whence four is the
number of the Evangelists), still has but one and the same voice.
However, from the parallelism of this sixth trumpet to the fifth seal
(Re 6:9, 10),
the martyrs' cry for the avenging of their blood from the altar
reaching its consummation under the sixth seal and sixth trumpet, I
prefer understanding this cry from the four corners of the altar
to refer to the saints' prayerful cry from the four quarters of the
world, incensed by the angel, and ascending to God from the
golden altar of incense, and bringing down in consequence fiery
judgments. Aleph omits the whole clause, "one from the four
horns."
14. in, &c.--Greek, "epi to potamo"; "on," or "at
the great river."
Euphrates--(Compare
Re 16:12).
The river whereat Babylon, the ancient foe of God's people was
situated. Again, whether from the literal region of the Euphrates, or
from the spiritual Babylon (the apostate Church, especially
ROME), four angelic ministers of God's judgments
shall go forth, assembling an army of horsemen throughout the four
quarters of the earth, to slay a third of men, the brunt of the
visitation shall be on Palestine.
15. were--"which had been prepared"
[TREGELLES rightly].
for an hour, and a day, and a month, and a year--rather as
Greek, "for (that is, against) THE hour,
and day, and month, and year," namely, appointed by God. The
Greek article (teen), put once only before all the
periods, implies that the hour in the day, and the day in the month,
and the month in the year, and the year itself, had been definitely
fixed by God. The article would have been omitted had a sum-total of
periods been specified, namely, three hundred ninety-one years and one
month (the period from A.D. 1281, when the Turks
first conquered the Christians, to 1672, their last conquest of them,
since which last date their empire has declined).
slay--not merely to "hurt"
(Re 9:10),
as in the fifth trumpet.
third part--(See on
Re 8:7-12).
of men--namely, of earthy men,
Re 8:13,
"inhabiters of the earth," as distinguished from God's sealed people
(of which the sealed of Israel,
Re 7:1-8,
form the nucleus).
16. Compare with these two hundred million,
Ps 68:17;
Da 7:10.
The hosts here are evidently, from their numbers and their appearance
(Re 9:17),
not merely human hosts, but probably infernal, though
constrained to work out God's will (compare
Re 9:1, 2).
and I heard--A, B, Aleph, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
CYPRIAN omit "and."
17. thus--as follows.
of fire--the fiery color of the breastplates answering to
the fire which issued out of their mouths.
of jacinth--literally, "of hyacinth color," the hyacinth of the
ancients answering to our dark blue iris: thus, their dark,
dull-colored breastplates correspond to the smoke out of
their mouths.
brimstone--sulphur-colored: answering to the
brimstone or sulphur out of their mouths.
18. By these three--A, B, C, and Aleph read (apo
for kupo), "From"; implying the direction whence the
slaughter came; not direct instrumentality as "by" implies. A, B, C,
Aleph also add "plagues" after "three." English Version
reading, which omits it, is not well supported.
by the fire--Greek, "owing to the fire,"
literally, "out of."
19. their--A, B, C and Aleph read, "the power of the
horses."
in their mouth--whence issued the fire, smoke, and
brimstone
(Re 9:17).
Many interpreters understand the horsemen to refer to the
myriads of Turkish cavalry arrayed in scarlet, blue, and yellow
(fire, hyacinth, and brimstone), the lion-headed
horses denoting their invincible courage, and the fire and
brimstone out of their mouths, the gunpowder and artillery
introduced into Europe about this time, and employed by the Turks; the
tails, like serpents, having a venomous sting, the false religion of
Mohammed supplanting Christianity, or, as ELLIOTT
thinks, the Turkish pachas' horse tails, worn as a symbol of authority.
(!) All this is very doubtful. Considering the parallelism of this
sixth trumpet to the sixth seal, the likelihood is that events are
intended immediately preceding the Lord's coming. "The false prophet"
(as
Isa 9:15
proves), or second beast, having the horns of a lamb, but speaking as
the dragon, who supports by lying miracles the final Antichrist,
seems to me to be intended. Mohammed, doubtless, is a forerunner of
him, but not the exhaustive fulfiller of the prophecy here: Satan will,
probably, towards the end, bring out all the powers of hell for the
last conflict (see on
Re 9:20,
on "devils"; compare
Re 9:1, 2, 17, 18).
with them--with the serpent heads and their venomous fangs.
20. the rest of the men--that is, the ungodly.
yet--So A, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic. B and
Aleph read, "did not even repent of," namely, so as to
give up "the works," &c. Like Pharaoh hardening his heart against
repentance notwithstanding the plagues.
of their hands--
(De 31:29).
Especially the idols made by their hands. Compare
Re 13:14, 15,
"the image of the beast"
Re 19:20.
that they should not--So B reads. But A, C, and Aleph
read "that they shall not": implying a prophecy of certainty
that it shall be so.
devils--Greek, "demons" which lurk beneath the idols
which idolaters worship.
21. sorceries--witchcrafts by means of drugs (so the
Greek). One of the fruits of the unrenewed flesh: the sin of
the heathen: about to be repeated by apostate Christians in the last
days,
Re 22:15,
"sorcerers." The heathen who shall have rejected the proffered Gospel
and clung to their fleshly lusts, and apostate Christians who shall
have relapsed into the same shall share the same terrible judgments.
The worship of images was established in the East in A.D. 842.
fornication--singular: whereas the other sins are in the plural.
Other sins are perpetrated at intervals: those lacking purity of heart
indulge in one perpetual fornication
[BENGEL].
CHAPTER 10
Re 10:1-11.
VISION OF THE
LITTLE
BOOK.
As an episode was introduced between the sixth and seventh seals, so
there is one here
(Re 10:1-11:14)
after the sixth and introductory to the seventh trumpet
(Re 11:15,
which forms the grand consummation). The Church and her fortunes are
the subject of this episode: as the judgments on the unbelieving
inhabiters of the earth
(Re 8:13)
were the exclusive subject of the fifth and sixth woe-trumpets.
Re 6:11
is plainly referred to in
Re 10:6
below; in
Re 6:11
the martyrs crying to be avenged were told they must "rest yet for a
little season" or time: in
Re 10:6
here they are assured, "There shall be no longer (any interval of)
time"; their prayer shall have no longer to wait, but
(Re 10:7)
at the trumpet sounding of the seventh angel shall be
consummated, and the mystery of God (His mighty plan heretofore
hidden, but then to be revealed) shall be finished. The
little open book
(Re 10:2, 9, 10)
is given to John by the angel, with a charge
(Re 10:11)
that he must prophesy again concerning (so the Greek)
peoples, nations, tongues, and kings: which prophecy (as appears
from
Re 11:15-19)
affects those peoples, nations, tongues, and kings only in
relation to ISRAEL AND THE
CHURCH, who form the main object of the
prophecy.
1. another mighty angel--as distinguished from the mighty
angel who asked as to the former and more comprehensive book
(Re 5:2),
"Who is worthy to open the book?"
clothed with a cloud--the emblem of God coming in judgment.
a--A, B, C, and Aleph read "the"; referring to
(Re 4:3)
the rainbow already mentioned.
rainbow upon his head--the emblem of covenant mercy to God's
people, amidst judgments on God's foes. Resumed from
Re 4:3
(see on
Re 4:3).
face as . . . the sun--
(Re 1:16; 18:1).
feet as pillars of fire--
(Re 1:15;
Eze 1:7).
The angel, as representative of Christ, reflects His glory and bears
the insignia attributed in
Re 1:15, 16; 4:3,
to Christ Himself. The pillar of fire by night led Israel
through the wilderness, and was the symbol of God's presence.
2. he had--Greek, "Having."
in his hand--in his left hand: as in
Re 10:5
(see on
Re 10:5),
he lifts up his right hand to heaven.
a little book--a roll little in comparison with the
"book"
(Re 5:1)
which contained the whole vast scheme of God's purposes, not to
be fully read till the final consummation. This other, a less
book, contained only a portion which John was now to make his own
(Re 10:9, 11),
and then to use in prophesying to others. The New Testament begins with
the word "book" (Greek, "biblus"), of which "the little
book" (Greek, "biblaridion") is the diminutive, "the
little bible," the Bible in miniature.
upon the sea . . . earth--Though the beast with seven
heads is about to arise out of the sea
(Re 13:1),
and the beast with two horns like a lamb
(Re 13:11)
out of the earth, yet it is but for a time, and that time
shall no longer be
(Re 10:6, 7)
when once the seventh trumpet is about to sound; the angel with
his right foot on the sea, and his left on the earth, claims both as
God's, and as about soon to be cleared of the usurper and his
followers.
3. as . . . lion--Christ, whom the angel represents,
is often so symbolized
(Re 5:5,
"the Lion of the tribe of Juda").
seven thunders--Greek, "the seven thunders." They
form part of the Apocalyptic symbolism; and so are marked by the
article as well known. Thus thunderings marked the
opening of the seventh seal
(Re 8:1, 5);
so also at the seventh vial
(Re 16:17, 18).
WORDSWORTH calls this the prophetic use of the
article; "the thunders, of which more hereafter." Their full
meaning shall be only known at the grand consummation marked by the
seventh seal, the seventh trumpet
(Re 11:19),
and the seventh vial.
uttered their--Greek, "spake their own voices";
that is, voices peculiarly their own, and not now revealed to
men.
4. when--Aleph reads, "Whatsoever things." But most
manuscripts support English Version.
uttered their voices--A, B, C, and Aleph omit "their
voices." Then translate, "had spoken."
unto me--omitted by A, B, C, Aleph, and Syriac.
Seal up--the opposite command to
Re 22:20.
Even though at the time of the end the things sealed in
Daniel's time were to be revealed, yet not so the voices of these
thunders. Though heard by John, they were not to be imparted by him to
others in this book of Revelation; so terrible are they that God in
mercy withholds them, since "sufficient unto the day is the evil
thereof." The godly are thus kept from morbid ponderings over the evil
to come; and the ungodly are not driven by despair into utter
recklessness of life. ALFORD adds another aim in
concealing them, namely, "godly fear, seeing that the arrows of God's
quiver are not exhausted." Besides the terrors foretold, there are
others unutterable and more horrifying lying in the background.
5. lifted up his hand--So A and Vulgate read. But B, C,
Aleph, Syriac, and Coptic, ". . . his
right hand." It was customary to lift up the hand towards
heaven, appealing to the God of truth, in taking a solemn oath. There
is in this part of the vision an allusion to
Da 12:1-13.
Compare
Re 10:4,
with Da 12:4, 9;
and
Re 10:5, 6,
end, with Da 12:7.
But there the angel clothed in linen, and standing upon the waters,
sware "a time, times, and a half" were to interpose before the
consummation; here, on the contrary, the angel standing with his left
foot on the earth, and his right upon the sea, swears there shall be
time no longer. There he lifted up both hands to heaven; here he
has the little book now open (whereas in Daniel the
book is sealed) in his left hand
(Re 10:2),
and he lifts up only his right hand to heaven.
6. liveth for ever and ever--Greek, "liveth unto the ages
of the ages" (compare
Da 12:7).
created heaven . . . earth . . . sea,
&c.--This detailed designation of God as the Creator, is appropriate to
the subject of the angel's oath, namely, the consummating of the
mystery of God
(Re 10:7),
which can surely be brought to pass by the same Almighty power that
created all things, and by none else.
that there should be time no longer--Greek, "that time
(that is, an interval of time) no longer shall be." The martyrs shall
have no longer a time to wait for the accomplishment of their prayers
for the purgation of the earth by the judgments which shall remove
their and God's foes from it
(Re 6:11).
The appointed season or time of delay is at an end (the
same Greek is here as in
Re 6:11,
chronus). Not as English Version implies, Time shall end
and eternity begin.
7. But--connected with
Re 10:6.
"There shall be no longer time (that is, delay), but in the days
of the voice of the seventh angel, when he is about to (so the
Greek) sound his trumpet (so the Greek), then (literally,
'also'; which conjunction often introduces the consequent member of a
sentence) the mystery of God is finished," literally, "has been
finished"; the prophet regarding the future as certain as if it were
past. A, C, Aleph, and Coptic read the past tense
(Greek, "etelesthee"). B reads, as English
Version, the future tense (Greek, "telesthee").
"should be finished" (compare
Re 11:15-18).
Sweet consolation to the waiting saints! The seventh trumpet shall be
sounded without further delay.
the mystery of God--the theme of the "little book," and so of
the remainder of the Apocalypse. What a grand contrast to the "mystery
of iniquity Babylon!" The mystery of God's scheme of redemption, once
hidden in God's secret counsel and dimly shadowed forth in types and
prophecies, but now more and more clearly revealed according as the
Gospel kingdom develops itself, up to its fullest consummation at the
end. Then finally His servants shall praise Him most fully, for the
glorious consummation of the mystery in having taken to Himself and His
saints the kingdom so long usurped by Satan and the ungodly. Thus this
verse is an anticipation of
Re 11:15-18.
declared to--Greek, "declared the glad tidings to." "The
mystery of God" is the Gospel glad tidings. The office of the
prophets is to receive the glad tidings from God, in order
to declare them to others. The final consummation is the great
theme of the Gospel announced to, and by, the prophets (compare
Ga 3:8).
8. spake . . . and said--So Syriac and
Coptic read. But A, B, C, "(I heard) again speaking with me, and
saying" (Greek, "lalousan . . . legousan").
little book--So Aleph and B read. But A and C, "the
book."
9. I went--Greek, "I went away." John here leaves
heaven, his standing-point of observation heretofore, to be near the
angel standing on the earth and sea.
Give--A, B, C, and Vulgate read the infinitive, "Telling
him to give."
eat it up--appropriate its contents so entirely as to be
assimilated with (as food), and become part of thyself, so as to impart
them the more vividly to others. His finding the roll sweet to the
taste at first, is because it was the Lord's will he was doing, and
because, divesting himself of carnal feeling, he regarded God's will as
always agreeable, however bitter might be the message of judgment to be
announced. Compare
Ps 40:8,
Margin, as to Christ's inner complete appropriation of God's
word.
thy belly bitter--parallel to
Eze 2:10,
"There was written therein lamentations, and mourning, and woe."
as honey--
(Ps 19:10; 119:103).
Honey, sweet to the mouth, sometimes turns into bile in the stomach.
The thought that God would be glorified
(Re 11:3-6, 11-18)
gave him the sweetest pleasure. Yet, afterwards the belly, or
carnal natural feeling, was embittered with grief at the prophecy of
the coming bitter persecutions of the Church
(Re 11:7-10);
compare
Joh 16:1, 2.
The revelation of the secrets of futurity is sweet to one at
first, but bitter and distasteful to our natural man, when we
learn the cross which is to be borne before the crown shall be won.
John was grieved at the coming apostasy and the sufferings of the
Church at the hands of Antichrist.
10. the little book--So A and C, but B, Aleph, and
Vulgate, "the book."
was bitter--Greek, "was embittered."
11. he said--A, B, and Vulgate read, "they say
unto me"; an indefinite expression for "it was said unto me."
Thou must--The obligation lies upon thee, as the servant of God,
to prophesy at His command.
again--as thou didst already in the previous part of this book
of Revelation.
before, &c.--rather as Greek (epilaois),
"concerning many peoples," &c., namely, in their relation to the
Church. The eating of the book, as in Ezekiel's case, marks John's
inauguration to his prophetical office--here to a fresh stage in it,
namely, the revealing of the things which befall the holy city and the
Church of God--the subject of the rest of the book.
CHAPTER 11
Re 11:1-19.
MEASUREMENT OF THE
TEMPLE.
THE
TWO
WITNESSES'
TESTIMONY:
THEIR
DEATH,
RESURRECTION, AND
ASCENSION:
THE
EARTHQUAKE:
THE
THIRD
WOE:
THE
SEVENTH
TRUMPET
USHERS IN
CHRIST'S
KINGDOM.
THANKSGIVING OF THE
TWENTY-FOUR
ELDERS.
This eleventh chapter is a compendious summary of, and introduction to,
the more detailed prophecies of the same events to come in the twelfth
through twentieth chapters. Hence we find anticipatory allusions
to the subsequent prophecies; compare
Re 11:7,
"the beast that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit" (not mentioned
before), with the detailed accounts,
Re 13:1, 11; 17:8;
also
Re 11:8,
"the great city," with
Re 14:8; 17:1, 5; 18:10.
1. and the angel stood--omitted in A, Vulgate, and
Coptic. Supported by B and Syriac. If it be omitted, the
"reed" will, in construction, agree with "saying." So
WORDSWORTH takes it. The reed, the canon of
Scripture, the measuring reed of the Church, our rule of faith,
speaks. So in
Re 16:7
the altar is personified as speaking (compare
Note, see on
Re 16:7).
The Spirit speaks in the canon of Scripture (the word canon is
derived from Hebrew, "kaneh," "a reed," the word here
used; and John it was who completed the canon). So VICTORINUS, AQUINAS, and VITRINGA. "Like a rod," namely, straight: like a rod
of iron
(Re 2:27),
unbending, destroying all error, and that "cannot be broken."
Re 2:27;
Heb 1:8,
Greek, "a rod of straightness," English Version, "a
scepter of righteousness"; this is added to guard against it being
thought that the reed was one "shaken by the wind" In the abrupt
style of the Apocalypse, "saying" is possibly indefinite, put for
"one said." Still WORDSWORTH'S view agrees
best with Greek. So the ancient commentator, ANDREAS OF CÆSAREA, in the end
of the fifth century (compare Notes, see on
Re 11:3, 4).
the temple--Greek, "naon" (as distinguished from
the Greek, "hieron," or temple in general), the Holy
Place, "the sanctuary."
the altar--of incense; for it alone was in "the sanctuary."
(Greek, "naos"). The measurement of the Holy place seems
to me to stand parallel to the sealing of the elect of Israel under the
sixth seal. God's elect are symbolized by the sanctuary at Jerusalem
(1Co 3:16, 17,
where the same Greek word, "naos," occurs for "temple,"
as here). Literal Israel in Jerusalem, and with the temple restored
(Eze 40:3, 5,
where also the temple is measured with the measuring reed, the
forty-first, forty-second, forty-third, and forty-fourth chapters),
shall stand at the head of the elect Church. The measuring implies at
once the exactness of the proportions of the temple to be restored, and
the definite completeness (not one being wanting) of the numbers of the
Israelite and of the Gentile elections. The literal temple at Jerusalem
shall be the typical forerunner of the heavenly Jerusalem, in which
there shall be all temple, and no portion exclusively set apart
as temple. John's accurately drawing the distinction in
subsequent chapters between God's servants and those who bear the mark
of the beast, is the way whereby he fulfils the direction here given
him to measure the temple. The fact that the temple is
distinguished from them that worship therein, favors the view
that the spiritual temple, the Jewish and Christian Church, is not
exclusively meant, but that the literal temple must also be meant. It
shall be rebuilt on the return of the Jews to their land. Antichrist
shall there put forward his blasphemous claims. The sealed elect of
Israel, the head of the elect Church, alone shall refuse his claims.
These shall constitute the true sanctuary which is here measured, that
is, accurately marked and kept by God, whereas the rest shall yield to
his pretensions. WORDSWORTH objects that, in the
twenty-five passages of the Acts, wherein the Jewish temple is
mentioned, it is called hieron, not naos, and so in the
apostolic Epistles; but this is simply because no occasion for
mentioning the literal Holy Place (Greek, "naos")
occurs in Acts and the Epistles; indeed, in
Ac 7:48,
though not directly, there does occur the term, naos, indirectly
referring to the Jerusalem temple Holy Place. In addressing
Gentile Christians, to whom the literal Jerusalem temple was not
familiar, it was to be expected the term, naos, should not be
found in the literal, but in the spiritual sense. In
Re 11:19
naos is used in a local sense; compare also
Re 14:15, 17; 15:5, 8.
2. But--Greek, "And."
the court . . . without--all outside the Holy
Place
(Re 11:1).
leave out--of thy measurement, literally, "cast out"; reckon as
unhallowed.
it--emphatic. It is not to be measured; whereas the Holy
Place is.
given--by God's appointment.
unto the Gentiles--In the wider sense, there are meant here "the
times of the Gentiles," wherein Jerusalem is "trodden down of
the Gentiles," as the parallel,
Lu 21:24,
proves; for the same word is used here [Greek, "patein"],
"tread under foot." Compare also
Ps 79:1;
Isa 63:18.
forty . . . two months--
(Re 13:5).
The same period as Daniel's "time, times, and half"
(Re 12:14);
and
Re 11:3,
and Re 12:6,
the woman a fugitive in the wilderness "a thousand two hundred and
threescore days." In the wider sense, we may either adopt the year-day
theory of 1260 years (on which, and the papal rule of 1260 years, see
on
Da 7:25;
Da 8:14;
Da 12:11),
or rather, regard the 2300 days
(Da 8:14),
1335 days
(Da 12:11, 12).
1290 days, and 1260 days, as symbolical of the long period of the
Gentile times, whether dating from the subversion of the Jewish
theocracy at the Babylonian captivity (the kingdom having been
never since restored to Israel), or from the last destruction of
Jerusalem under Titus, and extending to the restoration of the
theocracy at the coming of Him "whose right it is"; the different
epochs marked by the 2300, 1335, 1290, and 1260 days, will not be fully
cleared up till the grand consummation; but, meanwhile, our duty and
privilege urge us to investigate them. Some one of the epochs assigned
by many may be right but as yet it is uncertain. The times of the
Gentile monarchies during Israel's seven times punishment, will
probably, in the narrower sense
(Re 11:2),
be succeeded by the much more restricted times of the personal
Antichrist's tyranny in the Holy Land. The long years of papal misrule
may be followed by the short time of the man of sin who shall
concentrate in himself all the apostasy, persecution, and evil of the
various forerunning Antichrists, Antiochus, Mohammed, Popery, just
before Christ's advent. His time shall be THE
RECAPITULATION and open consummation of the "mystery of
iniquity" so long leavening the world. Witnessing churches may be
followed by witnessing individuals, the former occupying the longer,
the latter, the shorter period. The three and a half (1260 days
being three and a half years of three hundred sixty days each, during
which the two witnesses prophesy in sackcloth) is the sacred number
seven halved, implying the Antichristian world-power's time is
broken at best; it answers to the three and a half years' period
in which Christ witnessed for the truth, and the Jews, His own people,
disowned Him, and the God-opposed world power crucified Him (compare
Note, see on
Da 9:27).
The three and a half, in a word, marks the time in which the earthly
rules over the heavenly kingdom. It was the duration of Antiochus'
treading down of the temple and persecution of faithful Israelites. The
resurrection of the witnesses after three and a half days, answers to
Christ's resurrection after three days. The world power's times never
reach the sacred fulness of seven times three hundred sixty, that is,
2520, though they approach to it in 2300
(Da 8:14).
The forty-two months answer to Israel's forty-two sojournings
(Nu 33:1-50)
in the wilderness, as contrasted with the sabbatic rest in Canaan:
reminding the Church that here, in the world wilderness, she cannot
look for her sabbatic rest. Also, three and a half years was the period
of the heaven being shut up, and of consequent famine, in Elias' time.
Thus, three and a half represented to the Church the idea of toil,
pilgrimage, and persecution.
3. I will give power--There is no "power" in the
Greek, so that "give" must mean "give commission," or
some such word.
my two witnesses--Greek, "the two witnesses of
me." The article implies that the two were well known at least to John.
prophesy--preach under the inspiration of the Spirit, denouncing
judgments against the apostate. They are described by symbol as "the
two olive trees" and "the two candlesticks," or lamp-stands,
"standing before the God of the earth." The reference is to
Zec 4:3, 12,
where two individuals are meant, Joshua and Zerubbabel, who
ministered to the Jewish Church, just as the two olive trees emptied
the oil out of themselves into the bowl of the candlestick. So in the
final apostasy God will raise up two inspired witnesses to minister
encouragement to the afflicted, though sealed, remnant. As two
candlesticks are mentioned in
Re 11:4,
but only one in
Zec 4:2,
I think the twofold Church, Jewish and Gentile, may be meant by the two
candlesticks represented by the two witnesses: just as in
Re 7:1-8
there are described first the sealed of Israel, then those of all
nations. But see on
Re 11:4.
The actions of the two witnesses are just those of Moses when
witnessing for God against Pharaoh (the type of Antichrist, the last
and greatest foe of Israel), turning the waters into blood, and
smiting with plagues; and of Elijah (the witness for God
in an almost universal apostasy of Israel, a remnant of seven thousand,
however, being left, as the 144,000 sealed,
Re 7:1-8)
causing fire by his word to devour the enemy, and
shutting heaven, so that it rained not for three years and six
months, the very time (1260 days) during which the two witnesses
prophesy. Moreover, the words "witness" and "prophesy" are usually
applied to individuals, not to abstractions (compare
Ps 52:8).
DE BURGH thinks Elijah and
Moses will again appear, as
Mal 4:5, 6
seems to imply (compare
Mt 17:11;
Ac 3:21).
Moses and Elijah appeared with Christ at the Transfiguration, which
foreshadowed His coming millennial kingdom. As to Moses, compare
De 34:5, 6;
Jude 9.
Elias' genius and mode of procedure bears the same relation to the
"second" coming of Christ, that John the Baptist's did to the first
coming [BENGEL]. Many of the early Church thought
the two witnesses to be Enoch and Elijah. This would avoid the
difficulty of the dying a second time, for these have never yet
died; but, perhaps, shall be the witnesses slain. Still, the turning
the water to blood, and the plagues
(Re 11:6),
apply best to "Moses (compare
Re 15:3,
the song of Moses"). The transfiguration glory of Moses and
Elias was not their permanent resurrection-state, which shall not be
till Christ shall come to glorify His saints, for He has precedence
before all in rising. An objection to this interpretation is that those
blessed departed servants of God would have to submit to death
(Re 11:7, 8),
and this in Moses' case a second time, which
Heb 9:27
denies. See on
Zec 4:11, 12,
on the two witnesses as answering to "the two olive trees." The two
olive trees are channels of the oil feeding the Church, and symbols of
peace. The Holy Spirit is the oil in them. Christ's witnesses, in
remarkable times of the Church's history, have generally appeared in
pairs: as Moses and Aaron, the inspired civil and religious
authorities; Caleb and Joshua; Ezekiel the priest and Daniel the
prophet; Zerubbabel and Joshua.
in sackcloth--the garment of prophets, especially when calling
people to mortification of their sins, and to repentance. Their very
exterior aspect accorded with their teachings: so Elijah, and John who
came in His spirit and power. The sackcloth of the witnesses is
a catch word linking this episode under the sixth trumpet, with the
sun black as sackcloth (in righteous retribution on the
apostates who rejected God's witnesses) under the sixth seal
(Re 6:12).
4. standing before the God of the earth--A, B, C, Vulgate,
Syriac, Coptic, and ANDREAS read "Lord" for
"God": so
Zec 4:14.
Ministering to
(Lu 1:19),
and as in the sight of Him, who, though now so widely disowned on
"earth," is its rightful King, and shall at last be openly recognized
as such
(Re 11:15).
The phrase alludes to
Zec 4:10, 14,
"the two anointed ones that stand by the Lord of the whole earth." The
article "the" marks this allusion. They are "the two candlesticks," not
that they are the Church, the one candlestick, but as its
representative light-bearers (Greek, "phosteres,"
Php 2:15),
and ministering for its encouragement in a time of apostasy.
WORDSWORTH'S view is worth consideration, whether
it may not constitute a secondary sense: the two witnesses, the
olive trees, are THE TWO TESTAMENTS ministering their testimony to the
Church of the old dispensation, as well as to that of the new, which
explains the two witnesses being called also the two
candlesticks (the Old and New Testament churches; the candlestick
in
Zec 4:2
is but one as there was then but one Testament, and one Church,
the Jewish). The Church in both dispensations has no light in herself,
but derives it from the Spirit through the witness of the twofold word,
the two olive trees: compare Note, see on
Re 11:1,
which is connected with this, the reed, the Scripture
canon, being the measure of the Church: so
PRIMASIUS [X, p. 314]: the two witnesses preach in
sackcloth, marking the ignominious treatment which the word, like
Christ Himself, receives from the world. So the twenty-four elders
represent the ministers of the two dispensations by the double twelve.
But
Re 11:7
proves that primarily the two Testaments cannot be meant; for these
shall never be "killed," and never "shall have finished their
testimony" till the world is finished.
5. will hurt--Greek, "wishes," or "desires to hurt them."
fire . . . devoureth--(Compare
Jer 5:14; 23:29).
out of their mouth--not literally, but God makes their inspired
denunciations of judgment to come to pass and devour their
enemies.
if any man will hurt them--twice repeated, to mark the
immediate certainty of the accomplishment.
in this manner--so in like manner as he tries to hurt them
(compare
Re 13:10).
Retribution in kind.
6. These . . . power--Greek, "authorized
power."
it rain not--Greek, "huetos brechee," "rain shower
not," literally, "moisten" not (the earth).
smite . . . with all plagues--Greek, "with
(literally, 'in') every plague."
7. finished their testimony--The same verb is used of Paul's
ending his ministry by a violent death.
the beast that ascended out of the bottomless pit--Greek,
"the wild beast . . . the abyss." This beast was not
mentioned before, yet he is introduced as "the beast," because
he had already been described by Daniel
(Da 7:3, 11),
and he is fully so in the subsequent part of the Apocalypse, namely,
Re 13:1; 17:8.
Thus, John at once appropriates the Old Testament prophecies; and also,
viewing his whole subject at a glance, mentions as familiar things
(though not yet so to the reader) objects to be described hereafter by
himself. It is a proof of the unity that pervades all Scripture.
make war against them--alluding to
Da 7:21,
where the same is said of the little horn that sprang up among
the ten horns on the fourth beast.
8. dead bodies--So Vulgate, Syriac, and
ANDREAS. But A, B, C, the oldest manuscripts, and
Coptic read the singular, "dead body." The two fallen in one
cause are considered as one.
the great city--eight times in the Revelation elsewhere
used of BABYLON
(Re 14:8;
16:19; 17:18; 18:10, 16, 18, 19, 21).
In
Re 21:10
(English Version as to the new Jerusalem), the oldest
manuscripts omit "the great" before city, so that it forms no
exception. It must, therefore, have an anticipatory reference to the
mystical Babylon.
which--Greek, "the which," namely, "the city
which."
spiritually--in a spiritual sense.
Sodom--The very term applied by
Isa 1:10
to apostate Jerusalem (compare
Eze 16:48).
Egypt--the nation which the Jews' besetting sin was to lean
upon.
where . . . Lord was crucified--This identifies the
city as Jerusalem, though the Lord was crucified outside of the
city. EUSEBIUS mentions that the scene of
Christ's crucifixion was enclosed within the city by Constantine; so it
will be probably at the time of the slaying of the witnesses. "The
beast [for example, Napoleon and France's efforts] has been long
struggling for a footing in Palestine; after his ascent from the
bottomless pit he struggles much more" [BENGEL].
Some one of the Napoleonic dynasty may obtain that footing, and even be
regarded as Messiah by the Jews, in virtue of his restoring them to
their own land; and so may prove to be the last Antichrist. The
difficulty is, how can Jerusalem be called "the great city," that is,
Babylon? By her becoming the world's capital of idolatrous apostasy,
such as Babylon originally was, and then Rome has been; just as she is
here called also "Sodom and Egypt."
also our--A, B, C, ORIGEN,
ANDREAS, and others read, "also their."
Where their Lord, also, as well as they, was slain. Compare
Re 18:24,
where the blood of ALL slain on
earth is said to be found IN BABYLON, just as in
Mt 23:35,
Jesus saith that, "upon the Jews and JERUSALEM"
(Compare
Mt 23:37, 38)
shall "come ALL the righteous blood shed upon
earth"; whence it follows Jerusalem shall be the last capital of the
world apostasy, and so receive the last and worst visitation of all the
judgments ever inflicted on the apostate world, the earnest of which
was given in the Roman destruction of Jerusalem. In the wider sense, in
the Church-historical period, the Church being the sanctuary, all
outside of it is the world, the great city, wherein all the martyrdoms
of saints have taken place. Babylon marks its idolatry,
Egypt its tyranny, Sodom its desperate corruption,
Jerusalem its pretensions to sanctity on the ground of spiritual
privileges, while all the while it is the murderer of Christ in the
person of His members. All which is true of Rome. So VITRINGA. But in the more definite sense,
Jerusalem is regarded, even in Hebrews
(Heb 13:12-14),
as the world city which believers were then to go forth from, in order
to "seek one to come."
9. they--rather, "(some) of the peoples."
people--Greek, "peoples."
kindreds--Greek, "tribes"; all save the elect (whence it
is not said, The peoples . . . but [some] of the
peoples . . . , or, some of the peoples
. . . may refer to those of the nations
. . ., who at the time shall hold possession of Palestine
and Jerusalem).
shall see--So Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic. But A,
B, C, and ANDREAS, the present, "see," or rather
(Greek, "blepousin"), "look upon." The prophetic present.
dead bodies--So Vulgate, Syriac, and
ANDREAS. But A, B, C, and Coptic, singular,
as in
Re 11:8,
"dead body." Three and a half days answer to the three and a half years
(see on
Re 11:2, 3),
the half of seven, the full and perfect number.
shall not suffer--so B, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. But A, C, and Vulgate read, "do
not suffer."
in graves--so Vulgate and PRIMASIUS.
But B, C, Syriac, Coptic, and ANDREAS,
singular; translate, "into a sepulchre," literally, "a
monument." Accordingly, in righteous retribution in kind, the
flesh of the Antichristian hosts is not buried, but given to all
the fowls in mid-heaven to eat
(Re 19:17, 18, 21).
10. they that dwell upon . . . earth--those who belong
to the earth, as its citizens, not to heaven
(Re 3:10; 8:13; 12:12; 13:8).
shall--so Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic. But A, B,
and C read the present tense; compare Note, see on
Re 11:9,
on "shall not suffer."
rejoice over them--The Antichristianity of the last days shall
probably be under the name of philosophical enlightenment and
civilization, but really man's deification of himself. Fanaticism shall
lead Antichrist's followers to exult in having at last seemingly
silenced in death their Christian rebukers. Like her Lord, the Church
will have her dark passion week followed by the bright resurrection
morn. It is a curious historical coincidence that, at the fifth Lateran
Council, May 5, 1514, no witness (not even the Moravians who were
summoned) testified for the truth, as HUSS and
JEROME did at Constance; an orator ascended the
tribunal before the representatives of papal Christendom, and said,
"There is no reclaimant, no opponent." LUTHER, on
October 31, 1517, exactly three and a half years afterwards, posted up
his famous theses on the church at Wittenberg. The objection is, the
years are years of three hundred sixty-five, not three hundred sixty,
days, and so two and a half days are deficient; but still the
coincidence is curious; and if this prophecy be allowed other
fulfilments, besides the final and literal one under the last
Antichrist, this may reasonably be regarded as one.
send gifts one to another--as was usual at a joyous festival.
tormented them--namely, with the plagues which they had power to
inflict
(Re 11:5, 6);
also, by their testimony against the earthly.
11. Translate as Greek, "After the three days and
an half."
the Spirit of life--the same which breathed life into
Israel's dry bones,
Eze 37:10, 11
(see on
Eze 37:10, 11),
"Breath came into them." The passage here, as there, is closely
connected with Israel's restoration as a nation to political and
religious life. Compare also concerning the same,
Ho 6:2,
where Ephraim says, "After two days will He revive us; in the third
day He will raise us up, and we shall live in
His sight."
into--so B and Vulgate. But A reads (Greek, "en
autois"), "(so as to be) IN them."
stood upon their feet--the very words in
Eze 37:10,
which proves the allusion to be to Israel's resurrection, in
contrast to "the times of the Gentiles" wherein these "tread under foot
the holy city."
great fear--such as fell on the soldiers guarding Christ's tomb
at His resurrection
(Mt 28:4),
when also there was a great earthquake
(Re 11:2).
saw--Greek, "beheld."
12. they--so A, C, and Vulgate. But B, Coptic,
Syriac, and ANDREAS read, "I heard."
a cloud--Greek, "the cloud"; which may be merely the
generic expression for what we are familiar with, as we say "the
clouds." But I prefer taking the article as definitely alluding to
THE cloud which received Jesus at His ascension,
Ac 1:9
(where there is no article, as there is no allusion to a previous
cloud, such as there is here). As they resembled Him in their three and
a half years' witnessing, their three and a half days lying in death
(though not for exactly the same time, nor put in a tomb as He was), so
also in their ascension is the translation and transfiguration of the
sealed of Israel
(Re 7:1-8),
and the elect of all nations, caught up out of the reach of the
Antichristian foe. In
Re 14:14-16,
He is represented as sitting on a white cloud.
their enemies beheld them--and were thus openly convicted by God
for their unbelief and persecution of His servants; unlike Elijah's
ascension formerly, in the sight of friends only. The Church caught up
to meet the Lord in the air, and transfigured in body, is justified by
her Lord before the world, even as the man-child (Jesus) was "caught up
unto God and His throne" from before the dragon standing ready to
devour the woman's child as soon as born.
13. "In that same hour"; literally, "the hour."
great earthquake--answering to the "great earthquake" under the
sixth seal, just at the approach of the Lord
(Re 6:12).
Christ was delivered unto His enemies on the fifth day of the week, and
on the sixth was crucified, and on the sabbath rested; so it is
under the sixth seal and sixth trumpet that the last suffering of the
Church, begun under the fifth seal and trumpet, is to be consummated,
before she enters on her seventh day of eternal sabbath. Six is
the number of the world power's greatest triumph, but at the same time
verges on seven, the divine number, when its utter destruction
takes place. Compare "666" in
Re 13:18,
"the number of the beast."
tenth part of the city fell--that is, of "the great city"
(Re 16:19;
Zec 14:2).
Ten is the number of the world kingdoms
(Re 17:10-12),
and the beast's horns
(Re 13:1),
and the dragon's
(Re 12:3).
Thus, in the Church-historical view, it is hereby implied that one of
the ten apostate world kingdoms fall. But in the narrower view a tenth
of Jerusalem under Antichrist falls. The nine-tenths remain and become
when purified the center of Christ's earthly kingdom.
of men--Greek, "names of men." The men are as accurately
enumerated as if their names were given.
seven thousand--ELLIOTT interprets seven
chiliads or provinces, that is, the seven Dutch United Provinces
lost to the papacy; and "names of men," titles of dignity, duchies,
lordships, &c. Rather, seven thousand combine the two mystical
perfect and comprehensive numbers seven and thousand,
implying the full and complete destruction of the impenitent.
the remnant--consisting of the Israelite inhabitants not slain.
Their conversion forms a blessed contrast to
Re 16:9;
and above,
Re 9:20, 21.
These repenting
(Zec 12:10-14; 13:1),
become in the flesh the loyal subjects of Christ reigning over
the earth with His transfigured saints.
gave glory to the God of heaven--which while apostates, and
worshipping the beast's image, they had not done.
God of heaven--The apostates of the last days, in pretended
scientific enlightenment, recognize no heavenly power, but only
the natural forces in the earth which come under their observation. His
receiving up into heaven the two witnesses who had power
during their time on earth to shut heaven from raining
(Re 11:6),
constrained His and their enemies who witnessed it, to acknowledge
the God of heaven, to be God of the earth
(Re 11:4).
As in
Re 11:4
He declared Himself to be God of the earth by His two witnesses,
so now He proves Himself to be God of heaven also.
14. The second woe--that under the sixth trumpet
(Re 9:12-21),
including also the prophecy,
Re 11:1-13:
Woe to the world, joy to the faithful, as their redemption draweth
nigh.
the third woe cometh quickly--It is not mentioned in detail for
the present, until first there is given a sketch of the history of the
origination, suffering, and faithfulness of the Church in a time of
apostasy and persecution. Instead of the third woe being detailed, the
grand consummation is summarily noticed, the thanksgiving of the
twenty-four elders in heaven for the establishment of Christ's
kingdom on earth, attended with the destruction of the
destroyers of the earth.
15. sounded--with his trumpet. Evidently "the
LAST trumpet." Six is close to
seven, but does not reach it. The world judgments are complete
in six, but by the fulfilment of seven the world kingdoms
become Christ's. Six is the number of the world given over to
judgment. It is half of twelve, the Church's number, as three
and a half is half of seven, the divine number for completeness.
BENGEL thinks the angel here to have been
Gabriel, which name is compounded of El, GOD, and Geber, MIGHTY MAN
(Re 10:1).
Gabriel therefore appropriately announced to Mary the advent of the
mighty God-man: compare the account of the man-child's
birth which follows
(Re 12:1-6),
to which this forms the transition though the seventh trumpet in time
is subsequent, being the consummation of the historical episode, the
twelfth and thirteen chapters. The seventh trumpet, like the seventh
seal and seventh vial, being the consummation, is accompanied
differently from the preceding six: not the consequences which follow
on earth, but those IN HEAVEN, are set before us,
the great voices and thanksgiving of the twenty-four elders in
heaven, as the half-hour's silence in heaven at the seventh seal,
and the voice out of the temple in heaven, "It is done,"
at the seventh vial. This is parallel to
Da 2:44,
"The God of heaven shall set up a kingdom, which shall
never be destroyed: and the kingdom shall not be left to other people,
but it shall break to pieces all these kingdoms, and it shall
stand for ever." It is the setting up of Heaven's sovereignty
over the earth visibly, which, when invisibly exercised, was rejected
by the earthly rulers heretofore. The distinction of worldly and
spiritual shall then cease. There will be no beast in opposition to the
woman. Poetry, art, science, and social life will be at once worldly
and Christian.
kingdoms--A, B, C, and Vulgate read the singular, "The
kingdom (sovereignty) of (over) the world is our Lord's
and His Christ's." There is no good authority for English
Version reading. The kingdoms of the world give way to
the kingdom of (over) the world exercised by Christ. The
earth-kingdoms are many: His shall be one. The appellation
"Christ," the Anointed, is here, where His kingdom is
mentioned appropriately for the first time used in Revelation. For it
is equivalent to KING. Though priests and prophets
also were anointed, yet this term is peculiarly applied to Him
as King, insomuch that "the Lord's anointed" is His title as
KING, in places where He is distinguished from the
priests. The glorified Son of man shall rule mankind by His
transfigured Church in heaven, and by His people Israel on earth:
Israel shall be the priestly mediator of blessings to the whole world,
realizing them first.
he--not emphatic in the Greek.
shall reign for ever and ever--Greek, "unto the ages of
the ages." Here begins the millennial reign, the consummation of "the
mystery of God"
(Re 10:7).
16. before God--B and Syriac read, "before the throne
of God." But A, C, Vulgate, and Coptic read as
English Version.
seats--Greek, "thrones."
17. thanks--for the answer to our prayers
(Re 6:10, 11)
in destroying them which destroy the earth
(Re 11:18),
thereby preparing the way for setting up the kingdom of Thyself and Thy
saints.
and art to come--omitted in A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac,
CYPRIAN, and ANDREAS. The
consummation having actually come, they do not address Him as they did
when it was still future, "Thou that art to come." Compare
Re 11:18,
"is come." From the sounding of the seventh trumpet He is to His people
JAH, the ever present Lord,
WHO IS, more peculiarly than
JEHOVAH "who is, was, and is to come."
taken to thee thy great power--"to Thee" is not in the
Greek. Christ takes to Him the kingdom as His own of
right.
18. the nations were angry--alluding to
Ps 99:1,
Septuagint, "The Lord is become King: let the peoples become
angry." Their anger
is combined with alarm
(Ex 15:14;
2Ki 19:28,
"thy rage against Me is come up into Mine ears, I will put My
hook in thy nose," &c.). Translate, as the Greek is the same.
"The nations were angered, and Thy anger is come." How
petty man's impotent anger, standing here side by side with that
of the omnipotent God!
dead . . . be judged--proving that this seventh
trumpet is at the end of all things, when the judgment on Christ's foes
and the reward of His saints, long prayed for by His saints, shall take
place.
the prophets--as, for instance, the two prophesying
witnesses
(Re 11:3),
and those who have showed them kindness for Christ's sake. Jesus shall
come to effect by His presence that which we have looked for long, but
vainly, in His absence, and by other means.
destroy them which destroy the earth--Retribution in kind
(compare
Re 16:6;
Lu 19:27).
See on
Da 7:14-18.
19. A similar solemn conclusion to that of the seventh seal,
Re 8:5,
and to that of the seventh vial,
Re 16:18.
Thus, it appears, the seven seals, the seven trumpets, and the seven
vials, are not consecutive, but parallel, and ending in the same
consummation. They present the unfolding of God's plans for bringing
about the grand end under three different aspects, mutually
complementing each other.
the temple--the sanctuary or Holy place (Greek,
"naos"), not the whole temple (Greek,
"hieron").
opened in heaven--A and C read the article, "the temple of God
"which is" in heaven, was opened."
the ark of his testament--or ". . . His
covenant." As in the first verse the earthly sanctuary was
measured, so here its heavenly antitype is laid open, and the
antitype above to the ark of the covenant in the Holiest Place
below is seen, the pledge of God's faithfulness to His covenant in
saving His people and punishing their and His enemies. Thus this forms
a fit close to the series of trumpet judgments and an introduction to
the episode (the twelfth and thirteen chapters) as to His faithfulness
to His Church. Here first His secret place, the heavenly sanctuary, is
opened for the assurance of His people; and thence proceed His
judgments in their behalf
(Re 14:15, 17; 15:5; 16:17),
which the great company in heaven laud as "true and righteous." This
then is parallel to the scene at the heavenly altar, at the close of
the seals and opening of the trumpets
(Re 8:3),
and at the close of the episode (the twelfth through fifteenth
chapters) and opening of the vials
(Re 15:7, 8).
See on
Re 12:1,
note at the opening of the chapter.
CHAPTER 12
Re 12:1-17.
VISION OF THE
WOMAN,
HER
CHILD, AND THE
PERSECUTING
DRAGON.
1. This episode
(Re 12:1-15:8)
describes in detail the persecution of Israel and the elect
Church by the beast, which had been summarily noticed,
Re 11:7-10,
and the triumph of the faithful, and torment of the unfaithful. So also
the sixteenth through twentieth chapters are the description in detail
of the judgment on the beast, &c., summarily noticed in
Re 11:13, 18.
The beast in
Re 12:3,
&c., is shown not to be alone, but to be the instrument in the hand of
a greater power of darkness, Satan. That this is so, appears from the
time of the eleventh chapter being the period also in which the events
of the twelfth and thirteenth chapters take place, namely, 1260 days
(Re 12:6, 14;
Re 13:5;
compare
Re 11:2, 3).
great--in size and significance.
wonder--Greek, "sign": significant of momentous truths.
in heaven--not merely the sky, but the heaven beyond just
mentioned,
Re 11:19;
compare
Re 12:7-9.
woman clothed with the sun . . . moon under her
feet--the Church, Israel first, and then the Gentile Church;
clothed with Christ, "the Sun of righteousness." "Fair as the moon,
clear as the sun." Clothed with the Sun, the Church is the bearer of
divine supernatural light in the world. So the seven churches (that is,
the Church universal, the woman) are represented as light-bearing
candlesticks
(Re 1:12, 20).
On the other hand, the moon, though standing above the sea and
earth, is altogether connected with them and is an earthly light:
sea, earth, and moon represent the worldly element, in
opposition to the kingdom of God--heaven, the sun. The moon cannot
disperse the darkness and change it into-day: thus she represents the
world religion (heathenism) in relation to the supernatural world. The
Church has the moon, therefore, under her feet; but the stars, as
heavenly lights, on her head. The devil directs his efforts against the
stars, the angels of the churches, about hereafter to shine for ever.
The twelve stars, the crown around her head, are the twelve tribes of
Israel [AUBERLEN]. The allusions to Israel
before accord with this: compare
Re 11:19,
"the temple of God"; "the ark of His testament." The ark lost at the
Babylonian captivity, and never since found, is seen in the "temple of
God opened in heaven," signifying that God now enters again into
covenant with His ancient people. The woman cannot mean, literally, the
virgin mother of Jesus, for she did not flee into the wilderness and
stay there for 1260 days, while the dragon persecuted the remnant of her
seed
(Re 12:13-17)
[DE BURGH]. The sun,
moon, and twelve stars, are emblematical of Jacob, Leah, or
else Rachel, and the twelve patriarchs, that is, the Jewish Church:
secondarily, the Church universal, having under her feet, in due
subordination, the ever changing moon, which shines with a borrowed
light, emblem of the Jewish dispensation, which is now in a
position of inferiority, though supporting the woman, and also of the
changeful things of this world, and having on her head the crown of
twelve stars, the twelve apostles, who, however, are related closely to
Israel's twelve tribes. The Church, in passing over into the Gentile
world, is (1) persecuted; (2) then seduced, as heathenism begins to
react on her. This is the key to the meaning of the symbolic woman,
beast, harlot, and false prophet. Woman and beast form
the same contrast as the Son of man and the beasts in
Daniel. As the Son of man comes from heaven, so the woman is
seen in heaven
(Re 12:1).
The two beasts arise respectively out of the sea (compare
Da 7:3)
and the earth
(Re 13:1, 11):
their origin is not of heaven, but of earth earthy. Daniel beholds the
heavenly Bridegroom coming visibly to reign. John sees the woman, the
Bride, whose calling is heavenly, in the world, before the Lord's
coming again. The characteristic of woman, in contradistinction to man,
is her being subject, the surrendering of herself, her being receptive.
This similarly is man's relation to God, to be subject to, and receive
from, God. All autonomy of the human spirit reverses man's relation to
God. Woman-like receptivity towards God constitutes faith. By it
the individual becomes a child of God; the children
collectively are viewed as "the woman." Humanity, in so far as
it belongs to God, is the woman. Christ, the Son of the woman,
is in
Re 12:5
emphatically called "the MAN-child" (Greek,
"huios arrheen," "male-child"). Though born of a woman, and
under the law for man's sake, He is also the Son of God, and so the
HUSBAND of the Church. As Son of the woman, He is
"'Son of man"; as male-child, He is Son of God, and Husband of
the Church. All who imagine to have life in themselves are severed from
Him, the Source of life, and, standing in their own strength, sink to
the level of senseless beasts. Thus, the woman designates
universally the kingdom of God; the beast, the kingdom of the world.
The woman of whom Jesus was born represents the Old Testament
congregation of God. The woman's travail-pains
(Re 12:2)
represent the Old Testament believers' ardent longings for the promised
Redeemer. Compare the joy at His birth
(Isa 9:6).
As new Jerusalem (called also "the woman," or "wife,"
Re 21:2, 9-12),
with its twelve gates, is the exalted and transfigured Church, so the
woman with the twelve stars is the Church militant.
2. pained--Greek, "tormented" (basanizomene).
DE BURGH explains this of the
bringing in of the first-begotten into the world
AGAIN, when Israel shall at last welcome Him, and
when "the man-child shall rule all nations with the rod of iron." But
there is a plain contrast between the painful travailing of the
woman here, and Christ's second coming to the Jewish Church, the
believing remnant of Israel, "Before she travailed she brought
forth . . . a MAN-CHILD," that is,
almost without travail-pangs, she receives (at His second
advent), as if born to her, Messiah and a numerous seed.
3. appeared--"was seen."
wonder--Greek, "semeion," "sign."
red--So A and Vulgate read. But B, C, and Coptic
read, "of fire." In either case, the color of the dragon implies
his fiery rage as a murderer from the beginning. His
representative, the beast, corresponds, having seven heads
and ten horns (the number of horns on the fourth beast of
Da 7:7;
Re 13:1).
But there, ten crowns are on the ten horns (for before
the end, the fourth empire is divided into ten kingdoms); here,
seven crowns (rather, "diadems," Greek,
"diademata," not stephanoi, "wreaths") are upon his
seven heads. In
Da 7:4-7
the Antichristian powers up to Christ's second coming are represented
by four beasts, which have among them seven heads, that is, the
first, second, and fourth beasts having one head each, the
third, four heads. His universal dominion as prince of this
fallen world is implied by the seven diadems (contrast the "many
diadems on Christ's head,"
Re 19:12,
when coming to destroy him and his), the caricature of the seven
Spirits of God. His worldly instruments of power are marked by the
ten horns, ten being the number of the world. It marks his
self-contradictions that he and the beast bear both the number
seven (the divine number) and ten (the world number).
4. drew--Greek, present tense, "draweth," "drags down."
His dragging down the stars with his tail (lashed back
and forward in his fury) implies his persuading to apostatize, like
himself, and to become earthy, those angels and also once eminent human
teachers who had formerly been heavenly (compare
Re 12:1; 1:20;
Isa 14:12).
stood--"stands" [ALFORD]: perfect tense,
Greek, "hesteken."
ready to be delivered--"about to bring forth."
for to devour, &c.--"that when she brought forth, he might
devour her child." So the dragon, represented by his agent Pharaoh (a
name common to all the Egyptian kings, and meaning, according to some,
crocodile, a reptile like the dragon, and made an Egyptian
idol), was ready to devour Israel's males at the birth of the
nation. Antitypically the true Israel, Jesus, when born, was sought
for destruction by Herod, who slew all the males in and around
Bethlehem.
5. man-child--Greek, "a son, a male." On the deep
significance of this term, see on
Re 12:1, 2.
rule--Greek, "poimainein," "tend as a shepherd";
(see on
Re 2:27).
rod of iron--A rod is for long-continued obstinacy until they
submit themselves to obedience [BENGEL]:
Re 2:27;
Ps 2:9,
which passages prove the Lord Jesus to be meant. Any interpretation
which ignores this must be wrong. The male son's birth cannot be
the origin of the Christian state (Christianity triumphing over
heathenism under Constantine), which was not a divine child of the
woman, but had many impure worldly elements. In a secondary sense,
the ascending of the witnesses up to heaven answers to Christ's
own ascension, "caught up unto God, and unto His throne": as also His
ruling the nations with a rod of iron is to be shared in by believers
(Re 2:27).
What took place primarily in the case of the divine Son of the woman,
shall take place also in the case of those who are one with Him, the
sealed of Israel
(Re 7:1-8),
and the elect of all nations, about to be translated and to reign with
Him over the earth at His appearing.
6. woman fled--Mary's flight with Jesus into Egypt is a type of
this.
where she hath--So C reads. But A and B add "there."
a place--that portion of the heathen world which has received
Christianity professedly, namely, mainly the fourth kingdom, having its
seat in the modern Babylon, Rome, implying that all the heathen
world would not be Christianized in the present order of things.
prepared of God--literally, "from God." Not by human
caprice or fear, but by the determined counsel and foreknowledge of
God, the woman, the Church, fled into the wilderness.
they should feed her--Greek, "nourish her." Indefinite
for, "she should be fed." The heathen world, the wilderness,
could not nourish the Church, but only afford her an outward shelter.
Here, as in
Da 4:26,
and elsewhere, the third person plural refers to the heavenly
powers who minister from God nourishment to the Church. As
Israel had its time of first bridal love, on its first going out of
Egypt into the wilderness, so the Christian Church's
wilderness-time of first love was the apostolic age, when
it was separate from the Egypt of this world, having no city
here, but seeking one to come; having only a place in the wilderness
prepared of God
(Re 12:6, 14).
The harlot takes the world city as her own, even as Cain was the first
builder of a city, whereas the believing patriarchs lived in
tents. Then apostate Israel was the harlot and the young
Christian Church the woman; but soon spiritual fornication crept in,
and the Church in the seventeenth chapter is no longer the
woman, but the harlot, the great Babylon, which,
however, has in it hidden the true people of God
(Re 18:4).
The deeper the Church penetrated into heathendom, the more she herself
became heathenish. Instead of overcoming, she was overcome by the world
[AUBERLEN]. Thus, the woman is "the one
inseparable Church of the Old and New Testament" [HENGSTENBERG], the stock of the Christian Church being
Israel (Christ and His apostles being Jews), on which the Gentile
believers have been grafted, and into which Israel, on her
conversion, shall be grafted, as into her own olive tree. During
the whole Church-historic period, or "times of the Gentiles," wherein
"Jerusalem is trodden down of the Gentiles," there is no believing
Jewish Church, and therefore, only the Christian Church can be "the
woman." At the same time there is meant, secondarily, the preservation
of the Jews during this Church-historic period, in order that Israel,
who was once "the woman," and of whom the man-child was born,
may become so again at the close of the Gentile times, and stand at the
head of the two elections, literal Israel, and spiritual Israel, the
Church elected from Jews and Gentiles without distinction.
Eze 20:35, 36,
"I will bring you into the wilderness of the people
(Hebrew, 'peoples'), and there will I plead with you
. . . like as I pleaded with your fathers in the wilderness
of Egypt" (compare Notes, see on
Eze 20:35, 36):
not a wilderness literally and locally, but spiritually a
state of discipline and trial among the Gentile
"peoples," during the long Gentile times, and one finally
consummated in the last time of unparalleled trouble under Antichrist,
in which the sealed remnant
(Re 7:1-8)
who constitute "the woman," are nevertheless preserved "from the face
of the serpent"
(Re 12:14).
thousand two hundred and threescore days--anticipatory of
Re 12:14,
where the persecution which caused her to flee is mentioned in its
place:
Re 13:11-18
gives the details of the persecution. It is most unlikely that the
transition should be made from the birth of Christ to the last
Antichrist, without notice of the long intervening Church-historical
period. Probably the 1260 days, or periods, representing this long
interval, are RECAPITULATED on a shorter scale
analogically during the last Antichrist's short reign. They are
equivalent to three and a half years, which, as half of the divine
number seven, symbolize the seeming victory of the world over
the Church. As they include the whole Gentile times of Jerusalem's
being trodden of the Gentiles, they must be much longer than 1260
years; for, above several centuries more than 1260 years have elapsed
since Jerusalem fell.
7. In
Job 1:6-11; 2:1-6,
Satan appears among the sons of God, presenting himself before God in
heaven, as the accuser of the saints: again in
Zec 3:1, 2.
But at Christ's coming as our Redeemer, he fell from heaven,
especially when Christ suffered, rose again, and ascended to heaven.
When Christ appeared before God as our Advocate, Satan, the accusing
adversary, could no longer appear before God against us, but was
cast out judicially
(Ro 8:33, 34).
He and his angels henceforth range through the air and the earth, after
a time (namely, the interval between the ascension and the second
advent) about to be cast hence also, and bound in hell. That "heaven"
here does not mean merely the air, but the abode of angels, appears
from
Re 12:9, 10, 12;
1Ki 22:19-22.
there was--Greek, "there came to pass," or "arose."
war in heaven--What a seeming contradiction in terms, yet true!
Contrast the blessed result of Christ's triumph,
Lu 19:38,
"peace in heaven."
Col 1:20,
"made peace through the blood of His cross, by Him to reconcile
all things unto Himself; whether . . . things in earth, or
things in heaven."
Michael and his angels . . . the dragon . . .
and his angels--It was fittingly ordered that, as the rebellion
arose from unfaithful angels and their leader, so they should be
encountered and overcome by faithful angels and their archangel, in
heaven. On earth they are fittingly encountered, and shall be overcome,
as represented by the beast and false prophet, by the Son of man and
His armies of human saints
(Re 19:14-21).
The conflict on earth, as in
Da 10:13,
has its correspondent conflict of angels in heaven. Michael is
peculiarly the prince, or presiding angel, of the Jewish nation. The
conflict in heaven, though judicially decided already against Satan
from the time of Christ's resurrection and ascension, receives its
actual completion in the execution of judgment by the angels who cast
out Satan from heaven. From Christ's ascension he has no
standing-ground judicially against the believing elect.
Lu 10:18,
"I beheld (in the earnest of the future full fulfilment given in the
subjection of the demons to the disciples) Satan as lightning fall from
heaven." As Michael fought before with Satan about the body of the
mediator of the old covenant
(Jude 9),
so now the mediator of the new covenant, by offering His sinless body
in sacrifice, arms Michael with power to renew and finish the conflict
by a complete victory. That Satan is not yet actually and
finally cast out of heaven, though the judicial sentence
to that effect received its ratification at Christ's ascension, appears
from
Eph 6:12,
"spiritual wickedness in high (Greek, 'heavenly')
places." This is the primary Church-historical sense here. But, through
Israel's unbelief, Satan has had ground against that, the elect nation,
appearing before God as its accuser. At the eve of its restoration, in
the ulterior sense, his standing-ground in heaven against Israel, too,
shall be taken from him, "the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem"
rebuking him, and casting him out from heaven actually and for
ever by Michael, the prince, or presiding angel of the Jews. Thus
Zec 3:1-9
is strictly parallel, Joshua, the high priest, being representative of
his nation Israel, and Satan standing at God's fight hand as adversary
to resist Israel's justification. Then, and not till then, fully
(Re 12:10,
"NOW," &c.) shall ALL
things be reconciled unto Christ IN HEAVEN
(Col 1:20),
and there shall be peace in heaven
(Lu 19:38).
against--A, B, and C read, "with."
8. prevailed not--A and Coptic read, "He prevailed
not." But B and C read as English Version.
neither--A, B, and C read, "not even" (Greek,
"oude"): a climax. Not only did they not prevail, but not
even their place was found any more in heaven. There are four
gradations in the ever deeper downfall of Satan: (1) He is deprived of
his heavenly excellency, though having still access to heaven as man's
accuser, up to Christ's first coming. As heaven was not fully yet
opened to man
(Joh 3:13),
so it was not yet shut against Satan and his demons. The Old Testament
dispensation could not overcome him. (2) From Christ, down to the
millennium, he is judicially cast out of heaven as the accuser of the
elect, and shortly before the millennium loses his power against
Israel, and has sentence of expulsion fully executed on him and his by
Michael. His rage on earth is consequently the greater, his power being
concentrated on it, especially towards the end, when "he knoweth that
he hath but a short time"
(Re 12:12).
(3) He is bound during the millennium
(Re 20:1-3).
(4) After having been loosed for a while, he is cast for ever into the
lake of fire.
9. that old serpent--alluding to
Ge 3:1, 4.
Devil--the Greek, for "accuser," or "slanderer."
Satan--the Hebrew for "adversary," especially in a court
of justice. The twofold designation, Greek and Hebrew,
marks the twofold objects of his accusations and temptations, the elect
Gentiles and the elect Jews.
world--Greek, "habitable world."
10. Now--Now that Satan has been cast out of heaven.
Primarily fulfilled in part at Jesus' resurrection and ascension, when
He said
(Mt 28:18),
"All power [Greek, 'exousia,' 'authority,' as here; see
below] is given unto Me in heaven and in earth"; connected with
Re 12:5,
"Her child was caught up unto God and to His throne." In the
ulterior sense, it refers to the eve of Christ's second coming, when
Israel is about to be restored as mother-church of Christendom, Satan,
who had resisted her restoration on the ground of her unworthiness,
having been cast out by the instrumentality of Michael, Israel's
angelic prince (see on
Re 12:7).
Thus this is parallel, and the necessary preliminary to the glorious
event similarly expressed,
Re 11:15,
"The kingdom of this world is become (the very word here, Greek,
'egeneto,' 'is come,' 'hath come to pass') our Lord's and His
Christ's," the result of Israel's resuming her place.
salvation, &c.--Greek, "the salvation (namely,
fully, finally, and victoriously accomplished,
Heb 9:28;
compare
Lu 3:6,
yet future; hence, not till now do the blessed raise the fullest
hallelujah for salvation to the Lamb,
Re 7:10; 19:1)
the power (Greek, 'dunamis'), and the authority
(Greek, 'exousia'; 'legitimate power'; see
above) of His Christ."
accused them before our God day and night--Hence the need that
the oppressed Church, God's own elect (like the widow,
continually coming, so as even to weary the unjust
judge), should cry day and night unto Him.
11. they--emphatic in the Greek. "They" in particular.
They and they alone. They were the persons who overcame.
overcame--
(Ro 8:33, 34, 37; 16:20).
him--
(1Jo 2:14, 15).
It is the same victory (a peculiarly Johannean phrase) over
Satan and the world which the Gospel of John describes in the life of
Jesus, his Epistle in the life of each believer, and his Apocalypse in
the life of the Church.
by, &c.--Greek (dia to haima; accusative, not
genitive case, as English Version would require, compare
Heb 9:12),
"on account of (on the ground of) the blood of the Lamb";
"because of"; on account of and by virtue of its having been shed. Had
that blood not been shed, Satan's accusations would have been
unanswerable; as it is, that blood meets every charge. SCHOTTGEN mentions the Rabbinical tradition that Satan
accuses men all days of the year, except the day of atonement. TITTMANN takes the Greek "dia," as it often
means, out of regard to the blood of the Lamb; this was the
impelling cause which induced them to undertake the contest
for the sake of it; but the view given above is good
Greek, and more in accordance with the general sense of
Scripture.
by the word of their testimony--Greek, "on account of the
word of their testimony." On the ground of their faithful testimony,
even unto death, they are constituted victors. Their testimony evinced
their victory over him by virtue of the blood of the Lamb. Hereby they
confess themselves worshippers of the slain Lamb and overcome the
beast, Satan's representative; an anticipation of
Re 15:2,
"them that had gotten the victory over the beast" (compare
Re 13:15, 16).
unto--Greek, "achri," "even as far as." They
carried their not-love of life as far as even unto death.
12. Therefore--because Satan is cast out of heaven
(Re 12:9).
dwell--literally, "tabernacle." Not only angels and the souls of
the just with God, but also the faithful militant on earth, who already
in spirit tabernacle in heaven, having their home and citizenship
there, rejoice that Satan is cast out of their home.
"Tabernacle" for dwell is used to mark that, though still on the
earth, they in spirit are hidden "in the secret of God's
tabernacle." They belong not to the world, and, therefore, exult
in judgment having been passed on the prince of this world.
the inhabiters of--So ANDREAS reads. But A,
B, and C omit. The words probably, were inserted from
Re 8:13.
is come down--rather as Greek, "catebee," "is
gone down"; John regarding the heaven as his standing-point of
view whence he looks down on the earth.
unto you--earth and sea, with their inhabitants; those
who lean upon, and essentially belong to, the earth (contrast
Joh 3:7,
Margin, with
Joh 3:31; 8:23; 1Jo+4:5">Php 3:19,
end; 1Jo 4:5)
and its sea-like troubled politics. Furious at his expulsion
from heaven, and knowing that his time on earth is short until he shall
be cast down lower, when Christ shall come to set up His kingdom
(Re 20:1, 2),
Satan concentrates all his power to destroy as many souls as he can.
Though no longer able to accuse the elect in heaven, he can tempt and
persecute on earth. The more light becomes victorious, the greater will
be the struggles of the powers of darkness; whence, at the last crisis,
Antichrist will manifest himself with an intensity of iniquity greater
than ever before.
short time--Greek, "kairon," "season":
opportunity for his assaults.
13. Resuming from
Re 12:6
the thread of the discourse, which had been interrupted by the episode,
Re 12:7-12
(giving in the invisible world the ground of the corresponding conflict
between light and darkness in the visible world), this verse accounts
for her flight into the wilderness
(Re 12:6).
14. were given--by God's determinate appointment, not by human
chances
(Ac 9:11).
two--Greek, "the two wings of the great
eagle." Alluding to
Ex 19:4:
proving that the Old Testament Church, as well as the New Testament
Church, is included in "the woman." All believers are included
(Isa 40:30, 31).
The great eagle is the world power; in
Eze 17:3, 7,
Babylon and Egypt: in early Church history, Rome,
whose standard was the eagle, turned by God's providence from
being hostile into a protector of the Christian Church. As "wings"
express remote parts of the earth, the two wings may here mean
the east and west divisions of the Roman empire.
wilderness--the land of the heathen, the Gentiles: in contrast
to Canaan, the pleasant and glorious land. God dwells in
the glorious land; demons (the rulers of the heathen world,
Re 9:20;
1Co 10:20),
in the wilderness. Hence Babylon is called the desert of the
sea,
Isa 21:1-10
(referred to also in
Re 14:8; 18:2).
Heathendom, in its essential nature, being without God, is a desolate
wilderness. Thus, the woman's flight into the wilderness is the
passing of the kingdom of God from the Jews to be among the Gentiles
(typified by Mary's flight with her child from Judea into Egypt). The
eagle flight is from Egypt into the wilderness. The Egypt meant
is virtually stated
(Re 11:8)
to be Jerusalem, which has become spiritually so by crucifying our
Lord. Out of her the New Testament Church flees, as the Old
Testament Church out of the literal Egypt; and as the true Church
subsequently is called to flee out of Babylon (the woman become an
harlot, that is, the Church become apostate) [AUBERLEN].
her place--the chief seat of the then world empire, Rome. The
Acts of the Apostles describe the passing of the Church from Jerusalem
to Rome. The Roman protection was the eagle wing which often shielded
Paul, the great instrument of this transmigration, and Christianity,
from Jewish opponents who stirred up the heathen mobs. By degrees the
Church had "her place" more and more secure, until, under Constantine,
the empire became Christian. Still, all this Church-historical period
is regarded as a wilderness time, wherein the Church is in part
protected, in part oppressed, by the world power, until just before the
end the enmity of the world power under Satan shall break out against
the Church worse than ever. As Israel was in the wilderness forty
years, and had forty-two stages in her journey, so the Church for
forty-two months, three and a half years or times
[literally, seasons, used for years in Hellenistic
Greek (MOERIS, the Atticist), Greek,
"kairous,"
Da 7:25; 12:7],
or 1260 days
(Re 12:6)
between the overthrow of Jerusalem and the coming again of Christ,
shall be a wilderness sojourner before she reaches her millennial rest
(answering to Canaan of old). It is possible that, besides this
Church-historical fulfilment, there may be also an ulterior and
narrower fulfilment in the restoration of Israel to Palestine,
Antichrist for seven times (short periods analogical to the longer
ones) having power there, for the former three and a half times keeping
covenant with the Jews, then breaking it in the midst of the week, and
the mass of the nation fleeing by a second Exodus into the wilderness,
while a remnant remains in the land exposed to a fearful
persecution (the "144,000 sealed of Israel,"
Re 7:1-8; 14:1,
standing with the Lamb, after the conflict is over, on Mount
Zion: "the first-fruits" of a large company to be gathered to Him)
[DE BURGH]. These
details are very conjectural. In
Da 7:25; 12:7,
the subject, as perhaps here, is the time of Israel's calamity. That
seven times do not necessarily mean seven years, in which each day is a
year, that is, 2520 years, appears from Nebuchadnezzar's seven
times
(Da 4:23),
answering to Antichrist, the beast's duration.
15, 16. flood--Greek, "river" (compare
Ex 2:3;
Mt 2:20;
and especially
Ex 14:1-31).
The flood, or river, is the stream of Germanic tribes which,
pouring on Rome, threatened to destroy Christianity. But the earth
helped the woman, by swallowing up the flood. The earth, as
contradistinguished from water, is the world consolidated and
civilized. The German masses were brought under the influence of Roman
civilization and Christianity [AUBERLEN]. Perhaps
it includes also, generally, the help given by earthly powers (those
least likely, yet led by God's overruling providence to give help) to
the Church against persecutions and also heresies, by which she has
been at various times assailed.
17. wroth with--Greek, "at."
went--Greek, "went away."
the remnant of her seed--distinct in some sense from the woman
herself. Satan's first effort was to root out the Christian Church, so
that there should be no visible profession of Christianity. Foiled in
this, he wars
(Re 11:7; 13:7)
against the invisible Church, namely, "those who keep the commandments
of God, and have the testimony of Jesus" (A, B, and C omit "Christ").
These are "the remnant," or rest of her seed, as distinguished
from her seed, "the man-child"
(Re 12:5),
on one hand, and from mere professors on the other. The Church, in her
beauty and unity (Israel at the head of Christendom, the whole forming
one perfect Church), is now not manifested, but awaiting the
manifestations of the sons of God at Christ's coming. Unable to
destroy Christianity and the Church as a whole, Satan directs his
enmity against true Christians, the elect remnant: the others he
leaves unmolested.
CHAPTER 13
Re 13:1-18.
VISION OF THE
BEAST THAT
CAME
OUT OF THE
SEA:
THE
SECOND
BEAST,
OUT OF THE
EARTH,
EXERCISING THE
POWER OF THE
FIRST
BEAST, AND
CAUSING THE
EARTH TO
WORSHIP
HIM.
1. I stood--So B, Aleph, and Coptic read. But A,
C, Vulgate, and Syriac, "He stood." Standing on
the sand of the sea, HE gave his power to the beast that
rose out of the sea.
upon the sand of the sea--where the four winds were to be
seen striving upon the great sea
(Da 7:2).
beast--Greek, "wild beast." Man becomes "brutish" when he
severs himself from God, the archetype and true ideal, in whose image
he was first made, which ideal is realized by the man Christ Jesus.
Hence, the world powers seeking their own glory, and not God's, are
represented as beasts; and Nebuchadnezzar, when in
self-deification he forgot that "the Most High ruleth in the kingdom of
men," was driven among the beasts. In
Da 7:4-7
there are four beasts: here the one beast expresses the
sum-total of the God-opposed world power viewed in its universal
development, not restricted to one manifestation alone, as Rome. This
first beast expresses the world power attacking the Church more from
without; the second, which is a revival of, and minister to, the first,
is the world power as the false prophet corrupting and
destroying the Church from within.
out of the sea--
(Da 7:3;
compare Note, see on
Re 8:8);
out of the troubled waves of peoples, multitudes, nations, and
tongues. The earth
(Re 13:11),
on the other hand, means the consolidated, ordered world of nations,
with its culture and learning.
seven heads and ten horns--A, B, and C transpose, "ten horns and
seven heads." The ten horns are now put first (contrast the order,
Re 12:3)
because they are crowned. They shall not be so till the last stage of
the fourth kingdom (the Roman), which shall continue until the fifth
kingdom, Christ's, shall supplant it and destroy it utterly; this last
stage is marked by the ten toes of the two feet of the image in
Da 2:33, 41, 42.
The seven implies the world power setting up itself as God, and
caricaturing the seven Spirits of God; yet its true character as
God-opposed is detected by the number ten accompanying the
seven. Dragon and beast both wear crowns, but the former on the heads,
the latter on the horns
(Re 12:3; 13:1).
Therefore, both heads and horns refer to kingdoms; compare
Re 17:7, 10, 12,
"kings" representing the kingdoms whose heads they are. The
seven kings, as peculiarly powerful--the great powers of the
world--are distinguished from the ten, represented by the horns
(simply called "kings,"
Re 17:12).
In Daniel, the ten mean the last phase of the world power, the
fourth kingdom divided into ten parts. They are connected with
the seventh head
(Re 17:12),
and are as yet future [AUBERLEN]. The mistake of
those who interpret the beast to be Rome exclusively, and the ten
horns to mean kingdoms which have taken the place of Rome in Europe
already, is, the fourth kingdom in the image has TWO legs, representing the eastern as well as the
western empire; the ten toes are not upon the one foot (the west), as
these interpretations require, but on the two (east and west) together,
so that any theory which makes the ten kingdoms belong to the west
alone must err. If the ten kingdoms meant were those which sprung up on
the overthrow of Rome, the ten would be accurately known, whereas
twenty-eight different lists are given by so many interpreters, making
in all sixty-five kingdoms! [TYSO in DE BURGH]. The seven heads are the
seven world monarchies, Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome,
the Germanic empire, under the last of which we live [AUBERLEN], and which devolved for a time on Napoleon,
after Francis, emperor of Germany and king of Rome, had resigned the
title in 1806. FABER explains the healing of
the deadly wound to be the revival of the Napoleonic dynasty after
its overthrow at Waterloo. That secular dynasty, in alliance with the
ecclesiastical power, the Papacy
(Re 13:11,
&c.), being "the eighth head," and yet "of the seven"
(Re 17:11),
will temporarily triumph over the saints, until destroyed in Armageddon
(Re 19:17-21).
A Napoleon, in this view, will be the Antichrist, restoring the Jews to
Palestine, and accepted as their Messiah at first, and afterwards
fearfully oppressing them. Antichrist, the summing up and concentration
of all the world evil that preceded, is the eighth, but yet one of the
seven
(Re 17:11).
crowns--Greek, "diadems."
name of blasphemy--So C, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. A, B, and Vulgate read, "names of
blasphemy," namely, a name on each of the heads; blasphemously
arrogating attributes belonging to God alone (compare Note, see
on
Re 17:3).
A characteristic of the little horn in
Da 7:8, 20, 21;
2Th 2:4.
2. leopard . . . bear . . . lion--This beast
unites in itself the God-opposed characteristics of the three preceding
kingdoms, resembling respectively the leopard, bear, and
lion. It rises up out of the sea, as Daniel's four
beasts, and has ten horns, as Daniel's fourth beast, and
seven heads, as Daniel's four beasts had in all, namely, one on the
first, one on the second, four on the third, and one on the fourth.
Thus it represents comprehensively in one figure the world power
(which in Daniel is represented by four) of all times and
places, not merely of one period and one locality, viewed as
opposed to God; just as the woman is the Church of all ages.
This view is favored also by the fact, that the beast is the vicarious
representative of Satan, who similarly has seven heads and
ten horns: a general description of his universal power in all
ages and places of the world. Satan appears as a serpent, as being the
archetype of the beast nature
(Re 12:9).
"If the seven heads meant merely seven Roman emperors, one cannot
understand why they alone should be mentioned in the original image of
Satan, whereas it is perfectly intelligible if we suppose them to
represent Satan's power on earth viewed collectively" [AUBERLEN].
3. One of--literally, "from among."
wounded . . . healed--twice again repeated
emphatically
(Re 13:12, 14);
compare
Re 17:8, 11,
"the beast that was, and is not, and shall ascend out of the
bottomless pit" (compare
Re 13:11);
the Germanic empire, the seventh head (revived in the eighth),
as yet future in John's time
(Re 17:10).
Contrast the change whereby Nebuchadnezzar, being humbled from his
self-deifying pride, was converted from his beast-like form and
character to MAN'S form and true position towards
God; symbolized by his eagle wings being plucked, and himself
made to stand upon his feet as a man
(Da 7:4).
Here, on the contrary, the beast's head is not changed into a
human head, but receives a deadly wound, that is, the world
kingdom which this head represents does not truly turn to God, but for
a time its God-opposed character remains paralyzed ("as it were slain";
the very words marking the beast's outward resemblance to the Lamb, "as
it were slain," see on
Re 5:6.
Compare also the second beast's resemblance to the Lamb,
Re 13:11).
Though seemingly slain (Greek for "wounded"), it remains
the beast still, to rise again in another form
(Re 13:11).
The first six heads were heathenish, Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Persia,
Greece, Rome; the new seventh world power (the pagan German hordes
pouring down on Christianized Rome), whereby Satan had hoped to stifle
Christianity
(Re 11:15, 16),
became itself Christianized (answering to the beast's, as it were,
deadly wound: it was slain, and it is not,
Re 17:11).
Its ascent out of the bottomless pit answers to the healing
of its deadly wound
(Re 17:8).
No essential change is noticed in Daniel as effected by Christianity
upon the fourth kingdom; it remains essentially God-opposed to the
last. The beast, healed of its temporary and external
wound, now returns, not only from the sea, but from the
bottomless pit, whence it draws new Antichristian strength of
hell
(Re 13:3, 11, 12, 14;
Re 11:7; 17:8).
Compare the seven evil spirits taken into the temporarily
dispossessed, and the last state worse than the first,
Mt 12:43-45.
A new and worse heathenism breaks in upon the Christianized world, more
devilish than the old one of the first heads of the beast. The latter
was an apostasy only from the general revelation of God in nature and
conscience; but this new one is from God's revelation of love in His
Son. It culminates in Antichrist, the man of sin, the son of perdition
(compare
Re 17:11);
2Th 2:3;
compare
2Ti 3:1-4,
the very characteristics of old heathenism
(Ro 1:29-32)
[AUBERLEN]. More than one wound seems to me to be
meant, for example, that under Constantine (when the pagan worship of
the emperor's image gave way to Christianity), followed by the healing,
when image worship and the other papal errors were introduced into the
Church; again, that at the Reformation, followed by the lethargic
form of godliness without the power, and about to end in the
last great apostasy, which I identify with the second beast
(Re 13:11),
Antichrist, the same seventh world power in another form.
wondered after--followed with wondering gaze.
4. which gave--A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, and
ANDREAS read, "because he gave."
power--Greek, "the authority" which it had;
its authority.
Who is like unto the beast?--The very language appropriated to
God,
Ex 15:11
(whence, in the Hebrew, the Maccabees took their name; the
opponents of the Old Testament Antichrist, Antiochus);
Ps 35:10; 71:19; 113:5;
Mic 7:18;
blasphemously
(Re 13:1, 5)
assigned to the beast. It is a parody of the name "Michael" (compare
Re 12:7),
meaning, "Who is like unto God?"
5. blasphemies--So ANDREAS reads. B reads
"blasphemy." A, "blasphemous things" (compare
Da 7:8; 11:25).
power--"authority"; legitimate power (Greek,
"exousia").
to continue--Greek, "poiesai," "to act," or
"work." B reads, "to make war" (compare
Re 13:4).
But A, C, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS omit
"war."
forty . . . two month--(See on
Re 11:2, 3;
Re 12:6).
6. opened . . . mouth--The usual formula in the case
of a set speech, or series of speeches.
Re 13:6, 7
expand
Re 13:5.
blasphemy--So B and ANDREAS. A and C read
"blasphemies."
and them--So Vulgate, Coptic,
ANDREAS, and PRIMASIUS read.
A and C omit "and": "them that dwell (literally, 'tabernacle') in
heaven," mean not only angels and the departed souls of the righteous,
but believers on earth who have their citizenship in heaven, and whose
true life is hidden from the Antichristian persecutor in the secret
of God's tabernacle. See on
Re 12:12;
Joh 3:7.
7. power--Greek, "authority."
all kindreds . . . tongues . . .
nations--Greek, "every tribe . . . tongue
. . . nation." A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac,
ANDREAS, and PRIMASIUS add
"and people," after "tribe" or "kindred."
8. all that dwell upon the earth--being of earth earthy; in
contrast to "them that dwell in heaven."
whose names are not written--A, B, C, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS read singular, "(every one) whose
(Greek, 'hou'; but B, Greek, 'hon,' plural)
name is not written."
Lamb slain from the foundation of the world--The Greek
order of words favors this translation. He was slain in the
Father's eternal counsels: compare
1Pe 1:19, 20,
virtually parallel. The other way of connecting the words is, "Written
from the foundation of the world in the book of life of the Lamb
slain." So in
Re 17:8.
The elect. The former is in the Greek more obvious and simple.
"Whatsoever virtue was in the sacrifices, did operate through Messiah's
death alone. As He was "the Lamb slain from the foundation of the
world," so all atonements ever made were only effectual by His blood"
[BISHOP PEARSON,
Exposition of the Creed].
9. A general exhortation. Christ's own words of monition calling
solemn attention.
10. He that leadeth into captivity--A, B, C, and Vulgate
read, "if any one (be) for captivity."
shall go into captivity--Greek present, "goeth into
captivity." Compare
Jer 15:2,
which is alluded to here. Aleph, B, and C read simply, "he goeth
away," and omit "into captivity." But A and Vulgate support the
words.
he that killeth with the sword, must be killed with the
sword--So B and C read. But A reads, "if any (is for) being
(literally, 'to be') killed with the sword." As of old, so now, those
to be persecuted by the beast in various ways, have their trials
severally appointed them by God's fixed counsel. English Version
is quite a different sense, namely, a warning to the persecutors that
they shall be punished with retribution in kind.
Here--"Herein": in bearing their appointed sufferings lies the
patient endurance . . . of the saints. This is to be
the motto and watchword of the elect during the period of the world
kingdom. As the first beast is to be met by patience and
faith
(Re 13:10),
the second beast must be opposed by true wisdom
(Re 13:18).
11. another beast--"the false prophet."
out of the earth--out of society civilized, consolidated, and
ordered, but still, with all its culture, of earth earthy: as
distinguished from "the sea," the troubled agitations of various
peoples out of which the world power and its several kingdoms have
emerged. "The sacerdotal persecuting power, pagan and
Christian; the pagan priesthood making an image of the emperors
which they compelled Christians to worship, and working wonders by
magic and omens; the Romish priesthood, the inheritors of pagan rites,
images, and superstitions, lamb-like in Christian professions,
dragon-like in word and act" [ALFORD, and so the
Spanish Jesuit, LACUNZA, writing under the name
BEN EZRA]. As the first beast
was like the Lamb in being, as it were, wounded to death, so the
second is like the Lamb in having two lamb-like horns (its
essential difference from the Lamb is marked by its having
TWO, but the Lamb SEVEN
horns,
Re 5:6).
The former paganism of the world power, seeming to be wounded to death
by Christianity, revives. In its second beast-form it is Christianized
heathendom ministering to the former, and having earthly culture and
learning to recommend it. The second beast's, or false prophet's rise,
coincides in time with the healing of the beast's deadly wound and its
revival
(Re 13:12-14).
Its manifold character is marked by the Lord
(Mt 24:11, 24),
"Many false prophets shall rise," where He is speaking of the
last days. As the former beast corresponds to the first four beasts of
Daniel, so the second beast, or the false prophet, to the little horn
starting up among the ten horns of the fourth beast. This
Antichristian horn has not only the mouth of blasphemy
(Re 13:5),
but also "the eyes of man"
(Da 7:8):
the former is also in the first beast
(Re 13:1, 5),
but the latter not so. "The eyes of man" symbolize cunning and
intellectual culture, the very characteristic of "the false prophet"
(Re 13:13-15;
Re 16:14).
The first beast is physical and political; the second a spiritual
power, the power of knowledge, ideas (the favorite term in the French
school of politics), and scientific cultivation. Both alike are
beasts, from below, not from above; faithful allies, worldly
Antichristian wisdom standing in the service of the worldly
Antichristian power: the dragon is both lion and serpent: might and
cunning are his armory. The dragon gives his external power to the
first beast
(Re 13:2),
his spirit to the second, so that it speaks as a dragon
(Re 13:11).
The second, arising out of the earth, is in
Re 11:7; 17:8,
said to ascend out of the bottomless pit: its very culture and
world wisdom only intensify its infernal character, the pretense to
superior knowledge and rationalistic philosophy (as in the primeval
temptation,
Ge 3:5, 7,
"their EYES [as here] were opened") veiling the
deification of nature, self, and man. Hence spring Idealism,
Materialism, Deism, Pantheism, Atheism. Antichrist shall be the
culmination. The Papacy's claim to the double power, secular and
spiritual, is a sample and type of the twofold beast, that out of
the sea, and that out of the earth, or bottomless
pit. Antichrist will be the climax, and final form. PRIMASIUS OF ADRUMENTUM, in the
sixth century, says, "He feigns to be a lamb that he may assail the
Lamb--the body of Christ."
12. power--Greek, "authority."
before him--"in his presence"; as ministering to, and upholding
him. "The non-existence of the beast embraces the whole Germanic
Christian period. The healing of the wound and return of the beast is
represented [in regard to its final Antichristian manifestation
though including also, meanwhile, its healing and return under Popery,
which is baptized heathenism] in that principle which, since 1789, has
manifested itself in beast-like outbreaks" [AUBERLEN].
which dwell therein--the earthly-minded. The Church becomes the
harlot: the world's political power, the Antichristian
beast; the world's wisdom and civilization, the false
prophet. Christ's three offices are thus perverted: the first beast
is the false kingship; the harlot, the false priesthood;
the second beast, the false prophet. The beast is the
bodily, the false prophet the intellectual, the harlot
the spiritual power of Antichristianity
[AUBERLEN]. The Old-Testament Church stood
under the power of the beast, the heathen world power: the
Middle-Ages Church under that of the harlot: in modern times
the false prophet predominates. But in the last days all these
God-opposed powers which have succeeded each other shall
co-operate, and raise each other to the most terrible and
intense power of their nature: the false prophet causes men to
worship the beast, and the beast carries the harlot. These three
forms of apostasy are reducible to two: the apostate Church and
the apostate world, pseudo-Christianity and
Antichristianity, the harlot and the beast; for the false
prophet is also a beast; and the two beasts, as different
manifestations of the same beast-like principle, stand in
contradistinction to the harlot, and are finally judged together,
whereas separate judgment falls on the harlot [AUBERLEN].
deadly wound--Greek, "wound of death."
13. wonders--Greek, "signs."
so that--so great that.
maketh fire--Greek, "maketh even fire." This is the very
miracle which the two witnesses perform, and which Elijah long ago had
performed; this the beast from the bottomless pit, or the false
prophet, mimics. Not merely tricks, but miracles of a demoniacal kind,
and by demon aid, like those of the Egyptian magicians, shall be
wrought, most calculated to deceive; wrought "after the working
(Greek, 'energy') of Satan."
14. deceiveth them that dwell on the earth--the earthly-minded,
but not the elect. Even a miracle is not enough to warrant
belief in a professed revelation unless that revelation be in harmony
with God's already revealed will.
by the means of those miracles--rather as Greek,
"on account of (because of; in consequence of) those miracles."
which he had power to do--Greek, "which were given him to
do."
in the sight of the beast--"before him"
(Re 13:12).
which--A, B, and C read, "who"; marking, perhaps, a personal
Antichrist.
had--So B and ANDREAS read. But A, C, and
Vulgate read, "hath."
15. he had power--Greek, "it was given to him."
to give life--Greek, "breath," or "spirit."
image--Nebuchadnezzar set up in Dura a golden image to be
worshipped, probably of himself; for his dream had been interpreted,
"Thou art this head of gold"; the three Hebrews who refused to worship
the image were east into a burning furnace. All this typifies
the last apostasy. PLINY, in his letter to Trajan,
states that he consigned to punishment those Christians who would not
worship the emperor's image with incense and wine. So
JULIAN, the apostate, set up his own image with
the idols of the heathen gods in the Forum, that the Christians in
doing reverence to it, might seem to worship the idols. So
Charlemagne's image was set up for homage; and the Pope adored
the new emperor [DUPIN, vol. 6, p. 126]. Napoleon,
the successor of Charlemagne, designed after he had first lowered the
Pope by removing him to Fontainebleau, then to "make an idol of him"
[Memorial de Sainte Helene]; keeping the Pope near him, he
would, through the Pope's influence, have directed the religious, as
well as the political world. The revived Napoleonic dynasty may, in
some one representative, realize the project, becoming the beast
supported by the false prophet (perhaps some openly infidel supplanter
of the papacy, under a spiritual guise, after the harlot, or apostate
Church, who is distinct from the second beast, has been stripped and
judged by the beast,
Re 17:16);
he then might have an image set up in his honor as a test of secular
and spiritual allegiance.
speak--"False doctrine will give a spiritual, philosophical
appearance to the foolish apotheosis of the creaturely personified by
Antichrist" [AUBERLEN].
JEROME, on Daniel 7, says, Antichrist shall be
"one of the human race in whom the whole of Satan shall dwell bodily."
Rome's speaking images and winking pictures of the Virgin Mary
and the saints are an earnest of the future demoniacal miracles of the
false prophet in making the beast's or Antichrist's image to speak.
16. to receive a mark--literally, "that they should give them a
mark"; such a brand as masters stamp on their slaves, and monarchs on
their subjects. Soldiers voluntarily punctured their arms with marks of
the general under whom they served. Votaries of idols branded
themselves with the idol's cipher or symbol. Thus Antiochus Epiphanes
branded the Jews with the ivy leaf, the symbol of Bacchus
(2 Maccabees 6:7; 3 Maccabees 2:29).
Contrast God's seal and name in the foreheads of His
servants,
Re 7:3; 14:1; 22:4;
and
Ga 6:17,
"I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus," that is, I am His
soldier and servant. The mark in the right hand and forehead implies
the prostration of bodily and intellectual powers to the
beast's domination. "In the forehead by way of profession; in
the hand with respect to work and service" [AUGUSTINE].
17. And--So A, B, and Vulgate read. C,
IRENÆUS, 316, Coptic, and
Syriac omit it.
might buy--Greek, "may be able to buy."
the mark, or the name--Greek, "the mark (namely), the
name of the beast." The mark may be, as in the case of the sealing of
the saints in the forehead, not a visible mark, but symbolical of
allegiance. So the sign of the cross in Popery. The Pope's interdict
has often shut out the excommunicate from social and commercial
intercourse. Under the final Antichrist this shall come to pass in its
most violent form.
number of his name--implying that the name has some numerical
meaning.
18. wisdom--the armory against the second beast, as patience
and faith against the first. Spiritual wisdom is needed to
solve the mystery of iniquity, so as not to be beguiled by it.
count . . . for--The "for" implies the possibility of
our calculating or counting the beast's number.
the number of a man--that is, counted as men generally count. So
the phrase is used in
Re 21:17.
The number is the number of a man, not of God; he shall
extol himself above the power of the Godhead, as the
MAN of sin [AQUINAS].
Though it is an imitation of the divine name, it is only human.
six hundred threescore and six--A and Vulgate write the
numbers in full in the Greek. But B writes merely the three
Greek letters standing for numbers, Ch, X, St. "C reads"
616, but IRENÆUS, 328, opposes this and
maintains "666." IRENÆUS, in the second
century, disciple of POLYCARP, John's disciple,
explained this number as contained in the Greek letters of
Lateinos (L being thirty; A, one; T, three hundred; E, five; I,
ten; N, fifty; O, seventy; S, two hundred). The Latin is
peculiarly the language of the Church of Rome in all her official acts;
the forced unity of language in ritual being the counterfeit of the
true unity; the premature and spurious anticipation of the real unity,
only to be realized at Christ's coming, when all the earth shall speak
"one language"
(Zep 3:9).
The last Antichrist may have a close connection with Rome, and so the
name Lateinos (666) may apply to him. The Hebrew letters
of Balaam amount to 666 [BUNSEN]; a type of
the false prophet, whose characteristic, like Balaam's, will be
high spiritual knowledge perverted to Satanic ends. The number
six is the world number; in 666 it occurs in units, tens, and
hundreds. It is next neighbor to the sacred seven, but is
severed from it by an impassable gulf. It is the number of the world
given over to judgment; hence there is a pause between the sixth
and seventh seals, and the sixth and seventh trumpets. The judgments on
the world are complete in six; by the fulfilment of
seven, the kingdoms of the world become Christ's. As
twelve is the number of the Church, so six, its half, symbolizes
the world kingdom broken. The raising of the six to tens and hundreds
(higher powers) indicates that the beast, notwithstanding his
progression to higher powers, can only rise to greater ripeness for
judgment. Thus 666, the judged world power, contrasts with the 144,000
sealed and transfigured ones (the Church number, twelve, squared and
multiplied by one thousand, the number symbolizing the world pervaded
by God; ten, the world number, raised to the power of three the number
of God) [AUBERLEN]. The "mark" (Greek,
"charagma") and "name" are one and the same. The first two
radical letters of Christ (Greek, "Christos"),
Ch and R, are the same as the first two of
charagma, and were the imperial monogram of Christian Rome.
Antichrist, personating Christ, adopts a symbol like, but not agreeing
with, Christ's monogram, Ch, X, St; whereas the radicals in
"Christ" are Ch, R, St. Papal Rome has similarly substituted the
standard of the Keys for the standard of the Cross; so on
the papal coinage (the image of power,
Mt 22:20).
The two first letters of "Christ," Ch, R, represent seven
hundred, the perfect number. The Ch, X, St represent an
imperfect number, a triple falling away (apostasy) from
septenary perfection [WORDSWORTH].
CHAPTER 14
Re 14:1-20.
THE
LAMB
SEEN ON
ZION WITH THE 144,000.
THEIR
SONG.
THE
GOSPEL
PROCLAIMED BEFORE THE
END BY
ONE
ANGEL:
THE
FALL OF
BABYLON, BY
ANOTHER:
THE
DOOM OF THE
BEAST
WORSHIPPERS, BY A
THIRD.
THE
BLESSEDNESS OF THE
DEAD IN THE
LORD.
THE
HARVEST.
THE
VINTAGE.
In contrast to the beast, false prophet, and apostate Church
(Re 13:1-18)
and introductory to the announcement of judgments about to descend on
them and the world
(Re 14:8-11,
anticipatory of
Re 18:2-6),
stand here the redeemed, "the divine kernel of humanity, the positive
fruits of the history of the world and the Church"
[AUBERLEN]. The fourteenth through sixteenth
chapters describe the preparations for the Messianic judgment. As the
fourteenth chapter begins with the 144,000 of Israel
(compare
Re 7:4-8,
no longer exposed to trial as then, but now triumphant), so the
fifteenth chapter begins with those who have overcome from among
the Gentiles (compare
Re 15:1-5
with Re 7:9-17);
the two classes of elect forming together the whole company of
transfigured saints who shall reign with Christ.
1. a--A, B, C, Coptic, and ORIGEN
read, "the."
Lamb . . . on . . . Sion--having left His
position "in the midst of the throne," and now taking His stand on
Sion.
his Father's name--A, B, and C read, "His name and His
Father's name."
in--Greek, "upon." God's and Christ's name here
answers to the seal "upon their foreheads" in
Re 7:3.
As the 144,000 of Israel are "the first-fruits"
(Re 14:4),
so "the harvest"
(Re 14:15)
is the general assembly of Gentile saints to be translated by Christ as
His first act in assuming His kingdom, prior to His judgment
(Re 16:17-21,
the last seven vials) on the Antichristian world, in executing which
His saints shall share. As Noah and Lot were taken seasonably out of
the judgment, but exposed to the trial to the last moment
[DE BURGH], so those who
shall reign with Christ shall first suffer with Him, being delivered
out of the judgments, but not out of the trials. The Jews
are meant by "the saints of the Most High": against them Antichrist
makes war, changing their times and laws; for true Israelites
cannot join in the idolatry of the beast, any more than true
Christians. The common affliction will draw closely together, in
opposing the beast's worship, the Old Testament and New Testament
people of God. Thus the way is paved for Israel's conversion. This last
utter scattering of the holy people's power leads them, under
the Spirit, to seek Messiah, and to cry at His approach, "Blessed is He
that cometh in the name of the Lord."
2. from--Greek, "out of."
voice of many waters--as is the voice of Himself, such also is
the voice of His people.
I heard the voice of harpers--A, B, C, and
ORIGEN read, "the voice which I heard (was) as of
harpers."
3. sung--Greek, "sing."
as it were--So A, C, and Vulgate read. It is "as it were"
a new song; for it is, in truth, as old as God's eternal
purpose. But B, Syriac, Coptic, ORIGEN, and
ANDREAS omit these words.
new song--
(Re 5:9, 10).
The song is that of victory after conflict with the dragon, beast, and
false prophet: never sung before, for such a conflict had never been
fought before; therefore new: till now the kingdom of
Christ on earth had been usurped; they sing the new song in
anticipation of His blood-bought kingdom with His saints.
four beasts--rather, as Greek, "four living creatures."
The harpers and singers evidently include the 144,000: so the parallel
proves
(Re 15:2, 3),
where the same act is attributed to the general company of the
saints, the harvest
(Re 14:15)
from all nations. Not as ALFORD, "the harpers and
song are in heaven, but the 144,000 are on earth."
redeemed--literally, "purchased." Not even the angels can learn
that song, for they know not experimentally what it is to have
"come out of the great tribulation, and washed their robes white in the
blood of the Lamb"
(Re 7:14).
4. virgins--spiritually
(Mt 25:1);
in contrast to the apostate Church, Babylon
(Re 14:8),
spiritually "a harlot"
(Re 17:1-5;
Isa 1:21;
contrast
2Co 11:2;
Eph 5:25-27).
Their not being defiled with women means they were not led
astray from Christian faithfulness by the tempters who jointly
constitute the spiritual "harlot."
follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth--in glory, being
especially near His person; the fitting reward of their following Him
so fully on earth.
redeemed--"purchased."
being the--rather, "as a first-fruit." Not merely
a "first-fruit" in the sense in which all believers are so, but
Israel's 144,000 elect are the first-fruit, the Jewish and
Gentile elect Church is the harvest; in a further sense, the
whole of the transfigured and translated Church which reigns with
Christ at His coming, is the first-fruit, and the consequent
general ingathering of Israel and the nations, ending in the last
judgment, is the full and final harvest.
5. guile--So ANDREAS in one copy. But A, B,
C, ORIGEN, and ANDREAS in
other copies read, "falsehood." Compare with English Version
reading
Ps 32:2;
Isa 53:9;
Joh 1:47.
for--So B, Syriac, Coptic, ORIGEN,
and ANDREAS read. But A and C omit.
without fault--Greek, "blameless": in respect to the
sincerity of their fidelity to Him. Not absolutely, and in themselves
blameless; but regarded as such on the ground of His
righteousness in whom alone they trusted, and whom they faithfully
served by His Spirit in them. The allusion seems to be to
Ps 15:1, 2.
Compare
Re 14:1,
"stood on Mount Sion."
before the throne of God--A, B, C, Syriac, Coptic,
ORIGEN, and ANDREAS omit
these words. The oldest Vulgate manuscript supports them.
6. Here begins the portion relating to the Gentile world, as the
former portion related to Israel. Before the end the Gospel is
to be preached for a WITNESS unto all
nations: not that all nations shall be converted, but all nations
shall have had the opportunity given them of deciding whether they will
be for, or against, Christ. Those thus preached to are "they
that dwell (so A, Coptic, and Syriac read. But B, C,
ORIGEN, Vulgate, CYPRIAN, 312, read, 'SIT,' compare
Mt 4:16;
Lu 1:79,
having their settled home) on the earth," being of earth earthy:
this last season of grace is given them, if yet they may repent, before
"judgment"
(Re 14:7)
descends: if not, they will be left without excuse, as the world which
resisted the preaching of Noah in the the hundred twenty years "while
the long-suffering of God waited." "So also the prophets gave the
people a last opportunity of repentance before the Babylonian
destruction of Jerusalem, and our Lord and His apostles before the
Roman destruction of the holy city" [AUBERLEN].
The Greek for "unto" (epi, in A and C) means literally,
"upon," or "over," or "in respect to"
(Mr 9:12;
Heb 7:13).
So also "TO every nation" (Greek,
"epi," in A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac,
ORIGEN, ANDREAS,
CYPRIAN, and PRIMASIUS).
This, perhaps, implies that the Gospel, though diffused over the
globe, shall not come savingly unto any save the elect. The
world is not to be evangelized till Christ shall come: meanwhile, God's
purpose is "to take out of the Gentiles a people for His name," to be
witnesses of the effectual working of His Spirit during the
counter-working of "the mystery of iniquity."
everlasting gospel--the Gospel which announces the glad
tidings of the everlasting kingdom of Christ, about to ensue
immediately after the "judgment" on Antichrist, announced as imminent
in
Re 14:7.
As the former angel "flying through the midst of heaven"
(Re 8:13)
announced "woe," so this angel "flying in the midst of heaven" announced
joy. The three angels making this last proclamation of the Gospel,
the fall of Babylon
(Re 14:8),
the harlot, and the judgment on the beast worshippers
(Re 14:9-11),
the voice from heaven respecting the blessed dead
(Re 14:13),
the vision of the Son of man on the cloud
(Re 14:11),
the harvest
(Re 14:15),
and the vintage
(Re 14:18),
form the compendious summary, amplified in detail in the rest of the
book.
7. Fear God--the forerunner to embracing the love of God
manifested in the Gospel. Repentance accompanies faith.
give glory to him--and not to the beast (compare
Re 13:4;
Jer 13:16).
the hour of his judgment--"The hour" implies the definite
time. "Judgment," not the general judgment, but that up on Babylon,
the beast, and his worshippers
(Re 14:8-12).
worship him that made heaven--not Antichrist (compare
Ac 14:15).
sea . . . fountains--distinguished also in
Re 8:8, 10.
8. another--So Vulgate. But A, B, Syriac, and
ANDREAS add, "a second"; "another, a second
angel."
Babylon--here first mentioned; identical with the harlot,
the apostate Church; distinct from the beast, and judged
separately.
is fallen--anticipation of
Re 18:2.
A, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS support the
second "is fallen." But B, C, and Coptic omit it.
that great city--A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, and
Coptic omit "city." Then translate, "Babylon the great." The
ulterior and exhaustive fulfilment of
Isa 21:9.
because--So ANDREAS. But A, C,
Vulgate, and Syriac read, "which." B and Coptic
omit it. Even reading "which," we must understand it as giving the
reason of her fall.
all nations--A, B and C read, "all the nations."
the wine of the wrath of her fornication--the wine of the
wrath of God, the consequence of her fornication. As she
made the nations drunk with the wine of her fornication, so she herself
shall be made drunk with the wine of God's wrath.
9. A, B, C, and ANDREAS read, "another, a
third angel." Compare with this verse
Re 13:15, 16.
10. The same--Greek, "he also," as the just and
inevitable retribution.
wine of . . . wrath of God--
(Ps 75:8).
without mixture--whereas wine was so commonly mixed with
water that to mix wine is used in Greek for to pour
out wine; this wine of God's wrath is undiluted;
there is no drop of water to cool its heat. Naught of grace or hope is
blended with it. This terrible threat may well raise us above the fear
of man's threats. This unmixed cup is already mingled and
prepared for Satan and the beast's followers.
indignation--Greek, "orges," "abiding wrath," But
the Greek for "wrath" above (Greek, "thumou") is
boiling indignation, from (Greek, "thuo") a root
meaning "to boil"; this is temporary ebullition of anger; that is
lasting [AMMONIUS], and accompanied with a purpose
of vengeance [ORIGEN on Psalm 2:5].
tormented . . . in the presence of . . .
angels--
(Ps 49:14; 58:10; 139:21;
Isa 66:24).
God's enemies are regarded by the saints as their enemies, and when the
day of probation is past, their mind shall be so entirely one with
God's, that they shall rejoice in witnessing visibly the judicial
vindication of God's righteousness in sinners' punishment.
11. for ever and ever--Greek, "unto ages of ages."
no rest day nor night--Contrast the very different sense in
which the same is said of the four living creatures in heaven, "They
rest not day and night, saying, Holy, holy, holy"; yet they do "rest"
in another sense; they rest from sin and sorrow, weariness and
weakness, trial and temptation
(Re 14:13);
the lost have no rest from sin and Satan, terror, torment, and
remorse.
12. Here, &c.--resumed from
Re 13:10;
see on
Re 13:10.
In the fiery ordeal of persecution which awaits all who will not
worship the beast, the faith and patience of the
followers of God and Jesus shall be put to the test, and proved.
patience--Greek, "hupomene," "patient, persevering
endurance." The second "here" is omitted in A, B, C, Vulgate,
Syriac, Coptic, and PRIMASIUS. Translate,
"Here is the endurance of the saints, who keep," &c.
the faith of Jesus--the faith which has Jesus for its
object.
13. Encouragement to cheer those persecuted under the beast.
Write--to put it on record for ever.
Blessed--in resting from their toils, and, in the case of
the saints just before alluded to as persecuted by the beast, in
resting from persecutions. Their full blessedness is now
"from henceforth," that is, FROM THIS TIME, when
the judgment on the beast and the harvest gatherings of the elect are
imminent. The time so earnestly longed for by former martyrs is now all
but come; the full number of their fellow servants is on the verge of
completion; they have no longer to "rest (the same Greek
as here, anapausis) yet for a little season," their eternal
rest, or cessation from toils
(2Th 1:7;
Greek, "anesis," relaxation after hardships.
Heb 4:9, 10,
sabbatism of rest; and Greek, "catapausis," akin
to the Greek here) is close at hand now. They are
blessed in being about to sit down to the marriage supper of
the Lamb
(Re 19:9),
and in having part in the first resurrection
(Re 20:6),
and in having right to the tree of life
(Re 22:14).
In
Re 14:14-16
follows the explanation of why they are pronounced "blessed" now in
particular, namely, the Son of man on the cloud is just coming
to gather them in as the harvest ripe for garner.
Yea, saith the Spirit--The words of God the Father (the "voice
from heaven") are echoed back and confirmed by the Spirit (speaking in
the Word,
Re 2:7; 22:17;
and in the saints,
2Co 5:5;
1Pe 4:14).
All "God's promises in Christ are yea"
(2Co 1:20).
unto me--omitted in A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, and
Coptic.
that they may--The Greek includes also the idea, They are
blessed, in that they SHALL rest from
their toils (so the Greek).
and--So B and ANDREAS read. But A, C,
Vulgate, and Syriac read "for." They rest from their
toils because their time for toil is past; they enter on the
blessed rest because of their faith evinced by their works
which, therefore, "follow WITH (so the
Greek) them." Their works are specified because respect
is had to the coming judgment, wherein every man shall be "judged
according to his works." His works do not go before the believer, nor
even go by his side, but follow him at the same time that they
go with him as a proof that he is Christ's.
14. crown--Greek, "stephanon," "garland" of
victory; not His diadem as a king. The victory is described in
detail,
Re 19:11-21.
one sat--"one sitting," Greek, "cathemenon
homoion," is the reading of A, B, C, Vulgate, and
Coptic.
15. Thrust in--Greek, "Send." The angel does not command
the "Son of man"
(Re 14:14),
but is the mere messenger announcing to the Son the will of God the
Father, in whose hands are kept the times and the seasons.
thy sickle--alluding to
Mr 4:29,
where also it is "sendeth the sickle." The Son sends His
sickle-bearing angel to reap the righteous when fully ripe.
harvest--the harvest crop. By the harvest-reaping the
elect righteous are gathered out; by the vintage the
Antichristian offenders are removed out of the earth, the scene of
Christ's coming kingdom. The Son of man Himself, with a golden crown,
is introduced in the harvest-gathering of the elect, a mere
angel in the vintage
(Re 14:18-20).
is ripe--literally, "is dried." Ripe for glory.
16. thrust in--Greek, "cast."
17. out of the temple . . . in heaven--
(Re 11:19).
18. from the altar--upon which were offered the
incense-accompanied prayers of all saints, which bring down in answer
God's fiery judgment on the Church's foes, the fire being
taken from the altar and cast upon the earth.
fully ripe--Greek, "come to their acme"; ripe for
punishment.
19. "The vine" is what is the subject of judgment because its
grapes are not what God looked for considering its careful culture, but
"wild grapes"
(Isa 5:1-30).
The apostate world of Christendom, not the world of heathendom who have
not heard of Christ, is the object of judgment. Compare the emblem,
Re 19:15;
Isa 63:2, 3;
Joe 3:13.
20. without the city--Jerusalem. The scene of the blood-shedding
of Christ and His people shall be also the scene of God's vengeance on
the Antichristian foe. Compare the "horsemen,"
Re 9:16, 17.
blood--answering to the red wine. The slaughter of the apostates
is what is here spoken of, not their eternal punishment.
even unto the horse bridles--of the avenging "armies of heaven."
by the space of a thousand . . . six hundred
furlongs--literally, "a thousand six hundred furlongs off"
[W. KELLY]. Sixteen hundred is a square number;
four by four by one hundred. The four quarters, north, south,
east, and west, of the Holy Land, or else of the world (the
completeness and universality of the world-wide destruction being
hereby indicated). It does not exactly answer to the length of
Palestine as given by JEROME, one hundred sixty
Roman miles. BENGEL thinks the valley of Kedron,
between Jerusalem and the Mount of Olives, is meant, the torrent in
that valley being about to be discolored with blood to the extent of
sixteen hundred furlongs. This view accords with Joel's prophecy that
the valley of Jehoshaphat is to be the scene of the overthrow of the
Antichristian foes.
CHAPTER 15
Re 15:1-8.
THE
LAST
SEVEN
VIALS OF
PLAGUES:
SONG OF THE
VICTORS OVER THE
BEAST.
1. the seven last plagues--Greek, "seven plagues which
are the last."
is filled up--literally, "was finished," or "consummated": the
prophetical past for the future, the future being to God as though it
were past, so sure of accomplishment is His word. This verse is the
summary of the vision that follows: the angels do not actually receive
the vials till
Re 15:7;
but here, in
Re 15:1,
by anticipation they are spoken of as having them. There are no
more plagues after these until the Lord's coming in judgment. The
destruction of Babylon
(Re 18:2)
is the last: then in
Re 19:11-16
He appears.
2. sea of glass--Answering to the molten sea or great brazen
laver before the mercy seat of the earthly temple, for the purification
of the priests; typifying the baptism of water and the Spirit of all
who are made kings and priests unto God.
mingled with fire--answering to the baptism on earth
with fire, that is, fiery trial, as well as with the Holy Ghost,
which Christ's people undergo to purify them, as gold is purified of
its dross in the furnace.
them that had gotten the victory over--Greek, "those
(coming) off from (the conflict with) the beast-conquerors."
over the number of his name--A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac,
and Coptic omit the words in English Version, "over his
mark." The mark, in fact, is the number of his name which
the faithful refused to receive, and so were victorious over it.
stand on the sea of glass--ALFORD and
DE BURGH explain "on (the
shore of) the sea": at the sea. So the preposition,
Greek, "epi," with the accusative case, is used for
at,
Re 3:20.
It has a pregnant sense: "standing" implies rest, Greek
"epi" with the accusative case implies motion "towards." Thus
the meaning is, Having come TO the sea, and now
standing AT it. In
Mt 14:26,
where Christ walks on the sea, the Greek oldest
manuscripts have the genitive, not the accusative as here. Allusion is
made to the Israelites standing on the shore at the Red Sea,
after having passed victoriously through it, and after the Lord had
destroyed the Egyptian foe (type of Antichrist) in it. Moses and the
Israelites' song of triumph
(Ex 15:1)
has its antitype in the saints' "song of Moses and the Lamb"
(Re 15:3).
Still English Version is consistent with good Greek, and
the sense will then be: As the sea typifies the troubled state out of
which the beast arose, and which is to be no more in the blessed world
to come
(Re 21:1),
so the victorious saints stand on it, having it under their feet
(as the woman had the moon, see on
Re 12:1);
but it is now no longer treacherous wherein the feet sink, but solid
like glass, as it was under the feet of Christ, whose triumph and power
the saints now share. Firmness of footing amidst apparent instability
is thus represented. They can stand, not merely as victorious Israel
at the Red Sea, and as John upon the sand of the shore,
but upon the sea itself, now firm, and reflecting their glory as
glass, their past conflict shedding the brighter luster on their
present triumph. Their happiness is heightened by the retrospect of the
dangers through which they have passed. Thus this corresponds to
Re 7:14, 15.
harps of God--in the hands of these heavenly virgins,
infinitely surpassing the timbrels of Miriam and the Israelitesses.
3. song of Moses . . . and . . . the
Lamb--The New Testament song of the Lamb (that is, the song which
the Lamb shall lead, as being "the Captain of our salvation," just as
Moses was leader of the Israelites, the song in which those who conquer
through Him
[Ro 8:37]
shall join,
Re 12:11)
is the antitype to the triumphant Old Testament song of Moses and the
Israelites at the Red Sea
(Ex 15:1-21).
The Churches of the Old and New Testament are essentially one in their
conflicts and triumphs. The two appear joined in this phrase, as they
are in the twenty-four elders. Similarly,
Isa 12:1-6
foretells the song of the redeemed (Israel foremost) after the second
antitypical exodus and deliverance at the Egyptian Sea. The
passage through the Red Sea under the pillar of cloud was Israel's
baptism, to which the believer's baptism in trials corresponds. The
elect after their trials (especially those arising from the beast)
shall be taken up before the vials of wrath be poured on the beast and
his kingdom. So Noah and his family were taken out of the doomed world
before the deluge; Lot was taken out of Sodom before its destruction;
the Christians escaped by a special interposition of Providence to
Pella before the destruction of Jerusalem. As the pillar of
cloud and fire interposed between Israel and the Egyptian
foe, so that Israel was safely landed on the opposite shore before the
Egyptians were destroyed; so the Lord, coming with clouds and in
flaming fire, shall first catch up His elect people "in the
clouds to meet Him in the air," and then shall with fire destroy the
enemy. The Lamb leads the song in honor of the Father amidst the great
congregation. This is the "new song" mentioned in
Re 14:3.
The singing victors are the 144,000 of Israel, "the first-fruits," and
the general "harvest" of the Gentiles.
servant of God--
(Ex 14:31;
Nu 12:7;
Jos 22:5).
The Lamb is more: He is the SON.
Great and marvellous are thy works, &c.--part of Moses'
last song
(De 32:3, 4).
The vindication of the justice of God that so He may be glorified is
the grand end of God's dealings. Hence His servants again and again
dwell upon this in their praises
(Re 16:7; 19:2;
Pr 16:4;
Jer 10:10;
Da 4:37).
Especially at the judgment
(Ps 50:1-6; 145:17).
saints--There is no manuscript authority for this. A, B,
Coptic, and CYPRIAN read, "of the NATIONS." C reads "of the ages," and so Vulgate
and Syriac. The point at issue in the Lord's controversy with
the earth is, whether He, or Satan's minion, the beast, is "the King of
the nations"; here at the eve of the judgments descending on the
kingdom of the beast, the transfigured saints hail Him as "the King of
the nations"
(Eze 21:27).
4. Who shall not--Greek, "Who is there but must fear
Thee?" Compare Moses' song,
Ex 15:14-16,
on the fear which God's judgments strike into the foe.
thee--so Syriac. But A, B, C, Vulgate, and
CYPRIAN reject "thee."
all nations shall come--alluding to
Ps 22:27-31;
compare
Isa 66:23;
Jer 16:19.
The conversion of all nations, therefore, shall be when Christ
shall come, and not till then; and the first moving cause will be
Christ's manifested judgments preparing all hearts for receiving
Christ's mercy. He shall effect by His presence what we have in vain
tried to effect in His absence. The present preaching of the Gospel is
gathering out the elect remnant; meanwhile "the mystery of iniquity" is
at work, and will at last come to its crisis; then shall judgment
descend on the apostates at the harvest-end of this age
(Greek,
Mt 13:39, 40)
when the tares shall be cleared out of the earth, which thenceforward
becomes Messiah's kingdom. The confederacy of 'the apostates against
Christ becomes, when overthrown with fearful judgments, the very means
in God's overruling providence of preparing the nations not joined in
the Antichristian league to submit themselves to Him.
judgments--Greek, "righteousnesses."
are--literally, "were": the prophetical past for the immediate
future.
5. So
Re 11:19;
compare
Re 16:17.
"The tabernacle of the testimony" appropriately here comes to view,
where God's faithfulness in avenging His people with judgments on their
foes is about to be set forth. We need to get a glimpse within the Holy
place to "understand" the secret spring and the end of God's righteous
dealings.
behold--omitted by A, B, C, Syriac, and
ANDREAS. It is supported only by Vulgate,
Coptic, and PRIMASIUS, but no manuscript.
6. having--So B reads. But A and C, read "who have": not that
they had them yet (compare
Re 15:7),
but they are by anticipation described according to their office.
linen--So B reads. But A, C, and Vulgate, "a stone." On
the principle that the harder reading is the one least likely to be an
interpolation, we should read, "a stone pure ('and' is omitted in A, B,
C, and ANDREAS), brilliant" (so the Greek):
probably the diamond. With English Version, compare
Ac 1:10; 10:30.
golden girdles--resembling the Lord in this respect
(Re 1:13).
7. one of the four beasts--Greek, "living creatures." The
presentation of the vials to the angels by one of the living creatures
implies the ministry of the Church as the medium for manifesting to
angels the glories of redemption
(Eph 3:10).
vials--"bowls"; a broad shallow cup or bowl. The breadth of the
vials in their upper part would tend to cause their contents to pour
out all at once, implying the overwhelming suddenness of the
woes.
full of . . . wrath--How sweetly do the vials full
of odors, that is, the incense-perfumed prayers of the saints,
contrast with these!
8. temple . . . filled--
(Isa 6:4);
compare
Ex 40:34;
2Ch 5:14,
as to the earthly temple, of which this is the antitype.
the glory of God and . . . power--then fully
manifested.
no man was able to enter . . . the temple--because of
God's presence in His manifested glory and power during the execution
of these judgments.
CHAPTER 16
Re 16:1-21.
THE
SEVEN
VIALS AND THE
CONSEQUENT
PLAGUES.
The trumpets shook the world kingdoms in a longer process; the vials
destroy with a swift and sudden overthrow the kingdom of "the beast" in
particular who had invested himself with the world kingdom. The Hebrews
thought the Egyptian plagues to have been inflicted with but an
interval of a month between them severally
[BENGEL, referring to SEDER
OLAM]. As Moses took ashes from an earthly common
furnace, so angels, as priestly ministers in the heavenly temple, take
holy fire in sacred vials or bowls, from the heavenly altar to pour
down (compare
Re 8:5).
The same heavenly altar which would have kindled the sweet incense of
prayer bringing down blessing upon earth, by man's sin kindles the
fiery descending curse. Just as the river Nile, which ordinarily is the
source of Egypt's fertility, became blood and a curse through Egypt's
sin.
1. a great voice--namely, God's. These seven vials (the detailed
expansion of the vintage,
Re 14:18-20)
being called "the last," must belong to the period just when the term
of the beast's power has expired (whence reference is made in them all
to the worshippers of the beast as the objects of the judgments), close
to the end or coming of the Son of man. The first four are
distinguished from the last three, just as in the case of the seven
seals and the seven trumpets. The first four are more general,
affecting the earth, the sea, springs, and the sun, not merely a
portion of these natural bodies, as in the case of the trumpets, but
the whole of them; the last three are more particular, affecting the
throne of the beast, the Euphrates, and the grand consummation. Some of
these particular judgments are set forth in detail in the seventeenth
through twentieth chapters.
out of the temple--B and Syriac omit. But A, C,
Vulgate, and ANDREAS support the words.
the vials--so Syriac and Coptic. But A, B, C,
Vulgate, and ANDREAS read, "the
seven vials."
upon--Greek, "into."
2. went--Greek, "went away."
poured out--So the angel cast fire into the earth previous to
the series of trumpets
(Re 8:5).
upon--so Coptic. But A, B, C, Vulgate, and
Syriac read, "into."
noisome--literally, "evil" (compare
De 28:27, 35).
The very same Greek word is used in the Septuagint as
here, Greek, "helkos." The reason why the sixth Egyptian
plague is the first here is because it was directed against the
Egyptian magicians, Jannes and Jambres, so that they could not stand
before Moses; and so here the plague is sent upon those who in the
beast worship had practiced sorcery. As they submitted to the mark of
the beast, so they must bear the mark of the avenging God. Contrast
Re 7:3;
Eze 9:4, 6.
grievous--distressing to the sufferers.
sore upon the men--antitype to the sixth Egyptian plague.
which had the mark of the beast--Therefore this first vial is
subsequent to the period of the beast's rule.
3. angel--So B and ANDREAS. But A, C, and
Vulgate omit it.
upon--Greek, "into."
became as . . . blood--answering to another Egyptian
plague.
of a dead man--putrefying.
living soul--So B and ANDREAS. But A, C,
and Syriac, "soul of life" (compare
Ge 1:30; 7:21, 22).
in the sea--So B and ANDREAS. But A, C, and
Syriac read, "(as respects) the things in the sea."
4.
(Ex 7:20.)
angel--so Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. But A, B, C, and Vulgate omit
it.
5. angel of the waters--that is, presiding over the waters.
O Lord--omitted by A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS.
and shalt be--A, B, C, Vulgate, and
ANDREAS for this clause read, "(which art and
wast) holy." The Lord is now no longer He that shall
come, for He is come in vengeance and therefore the third of the
three clauses found in
Re 1:4, 8; 4:8
is here and in
Re 11:17
omitted.
judged thus--literally, "these things." "Thou didst inflict this
judgment."
6.
(Re 11:18,
end; Ge 9:6;
Isa 49:26.)
An anticipation of
Re 18:20, 24;
compare
Re 13:15.
For--A, B, C, and ANDREAS omit.
7. another out of--omitted in A, C, Syriac, and
Coptic. Translate then, "I heard the altar [personified]
saying." On it the prayers of saints are presented before God: beneath
it are the souls of the martyrs crying for vengeance on the foes of
God.
8. angel--so Coptic and ANDREAS. But
A, B, C, Vulgate, and Syriac omit it.
upon--not as in
Re 16:2, 3,
"into."
sun--Whereas by the fourth trumpet the sun is darkened
(Re 8:12)
in a third part, here by the fourth vial the sun's bright scorching
power is intensified.
power was given unto him--rather, "unto it," the sun.
men--Greek, "the men," namely, those who had the mark of
the beast
(Re 16:2).
9. men--Greek, "the men."
repented not to give him glory--
(Re 9:20).
Affliction, if it does not melt, hardens the sinner. Compare the better
result on others,
Re 11:13; 14:7; 15:4.
10. angel--omitted by A, B, C, Vulgate, and
Syriac. But Coptic and ANDREAS
support it.
seat--Greek, "throne of the beast": set up in
arrogant mimicry of God's throne; the dragon gave his throne to the
beast
(Re 13:2).
darkness--parallel to the Egyptian plague of darkness, Pharaoh
being the type of Antichrist (compare Notes, see on
Re 15:2, 3;
compare the fifth trumpet,
Re 9:2).
gnawed their tongues for pain--Greek, "owing to
the pain" occasioned by the previous plagues, rendered more
appalling by the darkness. Or, as "gnashing of teeth" is one of the
accompaniments of hell, so this "gnawing of their tongues" is through
rage at the baffling of their hopes and the overthrow of their kingdom.
They meditate revenge and are unable to effect it; hence their frenzy
[GROTIUS]. Those in anguish, mental and bodily,
bite their lips and tongues.
11. sores--This shows that each fresh plague was accompanied
with the continuance of the preceding plagues: there was an
accumulation, not a mere succession, of plagues.
repented not--(Compare
Re 16:9).
12. angel--so Coptic and ANDREAS.
A, B, C, Vulgate, and Syriac omit.
kings of the east--Greek, "the kings who are from the
rising of the sun." Reference to the Euphrates similarly occurs
in the sixth trumpet. The drying up of the Euphrates, I think,
is to be taken figuratively, as Babylon itself, which is
situated on it, is undoubtedly so,
Re 17:5.
The waters of the Euphrates (compare
Isa 8:7, 8)
are spiritual Babylon's, that is, the apostate Church's (of which Rome
is the chief, though not exclusive representative) spiritual and
temporal powers. The drying up of the waters of Babylon expresses the
same thing as the ten kings stripping, eating, and burning the whore.
The phrase, "way may be prepared for," is that applied to the Lord's
coming
(Isa 40:3;
Mt 3:3;
Lu 1:76).
He shall come from the East
(Mt 24:27;
Eze 43:2,
"the glory of the God of Israel came from the way of the East"):
not alone, for His elect transfigured saints of Israel and the Gentiles
shall accompany Him, who are "kings and priests unto God"
(Re 1:6).
As the Antichristian ten kings accompany the beast, so the
saints accompany as kings the King of kings to the last
decisive conflict. DE BURGH
and others take it of the Jews, who also were designed to be
a kingdom of priests to God on earth. They shall, doubtless,
become priest-kings in the flesh to the nations in the flesh at His
coming. Abraham from the East (if
Isa 41:2, 8, 9,
refers to him, and not Cyrus) conquering the Chaldean kings is a type
of Israel's victorious restoration to the priest-kingdom. Israel's
exodus after the last Egyptian plagues typifies Israel's restoration
after the spiritual Babylon, the apostate Church, has been smitten.
Israel's promotion to the priest-kingdom after Pharaoh's downfall, and
at the Lord's descent at Sinai to establish the theocracy, typifies the
restored kingdom of Israel at the Lord's more glorious descent, when
Antichrist shall be destroyed utterly. Thus, besides the transfigured
saints, Israel secondarily may be meant by "the kings from the East"
who shall accompany the "King of kings" returning "from the way of the
East" to reign over His ancient people. As to the drying up
again of the waters opposing His people's assuming the kingdom,
compare
Isa 10:26; 11:11, 15;
Zec 10:9-11.
The name Israel
(Ge 32:28)
implies a prince with God. Compare
Mic 4:8
as to the return of the kingdom to Jerusalem.
DURHAM, several centuries ago, interpreted the
drying up of the Euphrates to mean the wasting away of the Turkish
power, which has heretofore held Palestine, and so the way being
prepared for Israel's restoration. But as Babylon refers to the
apostate Church, not to Mohammedanism, the drying up of the Euphrates
(answering to Cyrus' overthrow of literal Babylon by marching into it
through the dry channel of the Euphrates) must answer to the draining
off of the apostate Church's resources, the Roman and Greek corrupt
Church having been heretofore one of the greatest barriers by its
idolatries and persecutions in the way of Israel's restoration and
conversion. The kings of the earth who are earthly
(Re 16:14),
stand in contrast to the kings from the East who are
heavenly.
13. unclean spirits like frogs--the antitype to the plague of
frogs sent on Egypt. The presence of the "unclean spirit" in the land
(Palestine) is foretold,
Zec 13:2,
in connection with idolatrous prophets. Beginning with
infidelity as to Jesus Christ's coming in the flesh, men shall end in
the grossest idolatry of the beast, the incarnation of all that is
self-deifying and God-opposed in the world powers of all ages; having
rejected Him that came in the Father's name, they shall worship one
that comes in his own, though really the devil's representative; as
frogs croak by night in marshes and quagmires, so these unclean spirits
in the darkness of error teach lies amidst the mire of filthy lusts.
They talk of liberty, but it is not Gospel liberty, but license
for lust. There being three, as also seven, in the
description of the last and worst state of the Jewish nation, implies a
parody of the two divine numbers, three of the Trinity, and
seven of the Holy Spirit
(Re 1:4).
Some observe that three frogs were the original arms of France,
a country which has been the center of infidelity, socialism, and false
spiritualism. A and B read, "as it were frogs," instead of
"like frogs," which is not supported by manuscripts. The unclean
spirit out of the mouth of the dragon symbolizes the proud
infidelity which opposes God and Christ. That out of the beast's
mouth is the spirit of the world, which in the politics of men, whether
lawless democracy or despotism, sets man above God. That out of the
mouth of the false prophet is lying spiritualism and religious
delusion, which shall take the place of the harlot when she shall have
been destroyed.
the dragon--Satan, who gives his power and throne
(Re 13:2)
to the beast.
false prophet--distinct from the harlot, the apostate Church (of
which Rome is the chief, though not sole, representative),
Re 17:1-3, 16;
and identical with the second beast,
Re 13:11-15,
as appears by comparing
Re 19:20
with Re 13:13;
ultimately consigned to the lake of fire with the first beast; as is
also the dragon a little later
(Re 20:10).
The dragon, the beast, and the false prophet, "the mystery of
iniquity," form a blasphemous Antitrinity, the counterfeit of "the
mystery of godliness" God manifests in Christ, witnessed to by the
Spirit. The dragon acts the part of God the Father, assigning his
authority to his representative the beast, as the Father assigns His to
the Son. They are accordingly jointly worshipped; compare as to the
Father and Son,
Joh 5:23;
as the ten-horned beast has its ten horns crowned with diadems
(Greek,
Re 13:1),
so Christ has on His head many diadems. While the false prophet,
like the Holy Ghost, speaks not of himself, but tells all men to
worship the beast, and confirms his testimony to the beast by
miracles, as the Holy Ghost attested similarly to Christ's
divine mission.
14. devils--Greek, "demons."
working miracles--Greek, "signs."
go forth unto--or "for," that is, to tempt them to the battle
with Christ.
the kings of the earth and, &c.--A, B, Syriac, and
ANDREAS omit "of the earth and," which clause is
not in any manuscript. Translate, "kings of the whole habitable world,"
who are "of this world," in contrast to "the kings of (from) the East"
(the sun-rising),
Re 16:12,
namely, the saints to whom Christ has appointed a kingdom, and
who are "children of light." God, in permitting Satan's
miracles, as in the case of the Egyptian magicians who were His
instruments in hardening Pharaoh's heart, gives the reprobate up to
judicial delusion preparatory to their destruction. As Aaron's rod was
changed into a serpent, so were those of the Egyptian magicians. Aaron
turned the water into blood; so did the magicians. Aaron brought up
frogs; so did the magicians. With the frogs their power ceased.
So this, or whatever is antitypical to it, will be the last effort of
the dragon, beast, and false prophet.
battle--Greek, "war"; the final conflict for the kingship
of the world described in
Re 19:17-21.
15. The gathering of the world kings with the beast against the
Lamb is the signal for Christ's coming; therefore He here gives the
charge to be watching for His coming and clothed in the garments of
justification and sanctification, so as to be accepted.
thief--
(Mt 24:43;
2Pe 3:10).
they--saints and angels.
shame--literally, "unseemliness" (Greek,
"aschemosunee"): Greek,
1Co 13:5:
a different word from the Greek in
Re 3:18
(Greek, "aischunee").
16. he--rather, "they (the three unclean spirits) gathered them
together." If English Version be retained, "He" will refer to
God who gives them over to the delusion of the three unclean
spirits; or else the sixth angel
(Re 16:12).
Armageddon--Hebrew, "Har," a mountain, and
"Megiddo" in Manasseh in Galilee, the scene of the overthrow of
the Canaanite kings by God's miraculous interposition under Deborah and
Barak; the same as the great plain of Esdraelon. Josiah, too, as the
ally of Babylon, was defeated and slain at Megiddo; and the mourning of
the Jews at the time just before God shall interpose for them against
all the nations confederate against Jerusalem, is compared to the
mourning for Josiah at Megiddo. Megiddo comes from a root,
gadad, "cut off," and means slaughter. Compare
Joe 3:2, 12, 14,
where "the valley of Jehoshaphat" (meaning in Hebrew, "judgment
of God") is mentioned as the scene of God's final vengeance on the
God-opposing foe. Probably some great plain, antitypical to the valleys
of Megiddo and Jehoshaphat, will be the scene.
17. angel--so ANDREAS. But A, B,
Vulgate, and Syriac omit it.
into--so ANDREAS (Greek,
"eis"). But A and B, "upon" (Greek, "epi").
great--so B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. But A omits.
of heaven--so B and ANDREAS But A,
Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic omit.
It is done--"It is come to pass." God's voice as to the final
consummation, as Jesus' voice on the cross when the work of expiation
was completed, "It is finished."
18. voice . . . thunders . . . lightnings--A
has the order, "lightnings . . . voices . . .
thunders." This is the same close as that of the seven seals and the
seven thunders; but with the difference that they do not merely form
the conclusion, but introduce the consequence, of the last vial,
namely, the utter destruction of Babylon and then of the Antichristian
armies.
earthquake--which is often preceded by a lurid state of air,
such as would result from the vial poured upon it.
men were--so B, Vulgate, Syriac, and
ANDREAS. But A and Coptic read, "A man
was."
so mighty--Greek, "such."
19. the great city--the capital and seat of the apostate Church,
spiritual Babylon (of which Rome is the representative, if one literal
city be meant). The city in
Re 11:8
(see on
Re 11:8),
is probably distinct, namely, Jerusalem under Antichrist (the
beast, who is distinct from the harlot or apostate Church).
In
Re 11:13
only a tenth of Jerusalem falls whereas here the city (Babylon)
"became (Greek) into three parts" by the earthquake.
cities of the nations--other great cities in league with
spiritual Babylon.
great . . . came in remembrance--Greek,
"Babylon the great was remembered"
(Re 18:5).
It is now that the last call to escape from Babylon is given to God's
people in her
(Re 18:4).
fierceness--the boiling over outburst of His wrath
(Greek, "thumou orgees"), compare Note, see on
Re 14:10.
20. Plainly parallel to
Re 6:14-17,
and by anticipation descriptive of the last judgment.
the mountains--rather as Greek, "there were found no
mountains."
21. fell--Greek, "descends."
upon men--Greek, "the men."
and men blasphemed God--not those struck who died, but the rest.
Unlike the result in the case of Jerusalem
(Re 11:13),
where "the remnant . . . affrighted . . . gave
glory to the God of heaven."
was--Greek, "is."
CHAPTER 17
Re 17:1-18.
THE
HARLOT
BABYLON'S
GAUD:
THE
BEAST ON
WHICH
SHE
RIDES,
HAVING
SEVEN
HEADS AND
TEN
HORNS,
SHALL
BE THE
INSTRUMENT OF
JUDGMENT ON
HER.
As
Re 16:12
stated generally the vial judgment about to be poured on the
harlot, Babylon's power, as the seventeenth and eighteen chapters
give the same in detail, so the nineteenth chapter gives in detail the
judgment on the beast and the false prophet, summarily
alluded to in
Re 16:13-15,
in connection with the Lord's coming.
1. unto me--A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic
omit.
many--So A. But B, "the many waters"
(Jer 51:13);
Re 17:15,
below, explains the sense. The whore is the apostate Church, just as
"the woman"
(Re 12:1-6)
is the Church while faithful. Satan having failed by violence,
tries too successfully to seduce her by the allurements of the world;
unlike her Lord, she was overcome by this temptation; hence she is seen
sitting on the scarlet-colored beast, no longer the wife, but
the harlot; no longer Jerusalem, but spiritually Sodom
(Re 11:8).
2. drunk with--Greek, "owing to." It cannot be pagan
Rome, but papal Rome, if a particular seat of error be meant, but I
incline to think that the judgment
(Re 18:2)
and the spiritual fornication
(Re 18:3),
though finding their culmination in Rome, are not restricted to it, but
comprise the whole apostate Church, Roman, Greek, and even Protestant,
so far as it has been seduced from its "first love"
(Re 2:4)
to Christ, the heavenly Bridegroom, and given its affections to worldly
pomps and idols. The woman
(Re 12:1)
is the congregation of God in its purity under the Old and New
Testament, and appears again as the Bride of the Lamb, the transfigured
Church prepared for the marriage feast. The woman, the invisible
Church, is latent in the apostate Church, and is the Church militant;
the Bride is the Church triumphant.
3. the wilderness--Contrast her in
Re 12:6, 14,
having a place in the wilderness-world, but not a home; a
sojourner here, looking for the city to come. Now, on the contrary, she
is contented to have her portion in this moral wilderness.
upon a scarlet . . . beast--The same as in
Re 13:1,
who there is described as here, "having seven heads and ten horns
(therein betraying that he is representative of the dragon,
Re 12:3),
and upon his heads names (so the oldest manuscripts read) of
blasphemy"; compare also
Re 17:12-14,
below, with
Re 19:19, 20,
and Re 17:13, 14, 16.
Rome, resting on the world power and ruling it by the claim of
supremacy, is the chief, though not the exclusive, representative of
this symbol. As the dragon is fiery-red, so the beast is
blood-red in color; implying its blood-guiltiness, and also
deep-dyed sin. The scarlet is also the symbol of kingly
authority.
full--all over; not merely "on his heads," as in
Re 13:1,
for its opposition to God is now about to develop itself in all its
intensity. Under the harlot's superintendence, the world power puts
forth blasphemous pretensions worse than in pagan days. So the Pope is
placed by the cardinals in God's temple on the altar to sit
there, and the cardinals kiss the feet of the Pope. This
ceremony is called in Romish writers "the adoration." [Historie de
Clerge, Amsterd., 1716; and LETTENBURGH'S
Notitia Curiæ Romanæ, 1683, p. 125; HEIDEGGER, Myst. Bab., 1, 511, 514, 537]; a papal
coin [Numismata Pontificum, Paris, 1679, p. 5] has the
blasphemous legend, "Quem creant, adorant."
Kneeling and kissing are the worship meant by John's word
nine times used in respect to the rival of God (Greek,
"proskunein"). Abomination, too, is the scriptural term
for an idol, or any creature worshipped with the homage due to the
Creator. Still, there is some check on the God-opposed world power
while ridden by the harlot; the consummated Antichrist will be when,
having destroyed her, the beast shall be revealed as the concentration
and incarnation of all the self-deifying God-opposed principles which
have appeared in various forms and degrees heretofore. "The Church has
gained outward recognition by leaning on the world power which in its
turn uses the Church for its own objects; such is the picture here of
Christendom ripe for judgment" [AUBERLEN]. The
seven heads in the view of many are the seven successive forms of
government of Rome: kings, consuls, dictators, decemvirs, military
tribunes, emperors, the German emperors
[WORDSWORTH], of whom Napoleon is the successor
(Re 17:11).
But see the view given, see on
Re 17:9, 10,
which I prefer. The crowns formerly on the ten horns
(Re 13:1)
have now disappeared, perhaps an indication that the ten kingdoms into
which the Germanic-Slavonic world [the old Roman empire,
including the East as well as the West, the two legs of the image with
five toes on each, that is, ten in all] is to be divided, will lose
their monarchical form in the end [AUBERLEN]; but
see
Re 17:12,
which seems to imply crowned kings.
4. The color scarlet, it is remarkable, is that reserved for
popes and cardinals. Paul II made it penal for anyone but cardinals to
wear hats of scarlet; compare Roman Ceremonial [3.5.5]. This
book was compiled several centuries ago by
MARCELLUS, a Romish archbishop, and dedicated to
Leo X. In it are enumerated five different articles of dress of
scarlet color. A vest is mentioned studded with pearls.
The Pope's miter is of gold and precious stones. These
are the very characteristics outwardly which Revelation thrice assigns
to the harlot or Babylon. So Joachim an abbot from Calabria, about
A.D. 1200, when asked by Richard of England, who
had summoned him to Palestine, concerning Antichrist, replied that "he
was born long ago at Rome, and is now exalting himself above all that
is called God." ROGER HOVEDEN
[Annals, 1.2], and elsewhere, wrote, "The harlot arrayed in gold
is the Church of Rome." Whenever and wherever (not in Rome alone) the
Church, instead of being "clothed (as at first,
Re 12:1)
with the sun" of heaven, is arrayed in earthly meretricious gauds,
compromising the truth of God through fear, or flattery, of the world's
power, science, or wealth, she becomes the harlot seated on the beast,
and doomed in righteous retribution to be judged by the beast
(Re 17:16).
Soon, like Rome, and like the Jews of Christ's and the apostles' time
leagued with the heathen Rome, she will then become the persecutor of
the saints
(Re 17:6).
Instead of drinking her Lord's "cup" of suffering, she has "a cup full
of abominations and filthinesses." Rome, in her medals, represents
herself holding a cup with the self-condemning inscription, "Sedet
super universum." Meanwhile the world power gives up its hostility
and accepts Christianity externally; the beast gives up its God-opposed
character, the woman gives up her divine one. They meet halfway by
mutual concessions; Christianity becomes worldly, the world becomes
Christianized. The gainer is the world; the loser is the Church. The
beast for a time receives a deadly wound
(Re 13:3),
but is not really transfigured; he will return worse than ever
(Re 17:11-14).
The Lord alone by His coming can make the kingdoms of this world become
the kingdoms of our Lord and His Christ. The "purple" is the badge of
empire; even as in mockery it was put on our Lord.
decked--literally, "gilded."
stones--Greek, "stone."
filthiness--A, B, and ANDREAS read, "the
filthy (impure) things."
5. upon . . . forehead . . . name--as
harlots usually had. What a contrast to "HOLINESS TO
THE LORD," inscribed on the miter on
the high priest's forehead!
mystery--implying a spiritual fact heretofore hidden, and
incapable of discovery by mere reason, but now revealed. As the union
of Christ and the Church is a "great mystery" (a spiritual truth of
momentous interest, once hidden, now revealed,
Eph 5:31, 32),
so the Church conforming to the world and thereby becoming a harlot is
a counter "mystery" (or spiritual truth, symbolically now revealed). As
iniquity in the harlot is a leaven working in "mystery," and
therefore called "the mystery of iniquity," so when she is
destroyed, the iniquity heretofore working (comparatively) latently in
her, shall be revealed in the man of iniquity, the open
embodiment of all previous evil. Contrast the "mystery of God" and
"godliness,"
Re 10:7;
1Ti 3:16.
It was Rome that crucified Christ; that destroyed Jerusalem and
scattered the Jews; that persecuted the early Christians in pagan
times, and Protestant Christians in papal times; and probably shall be
again restored to its pristine grandeur, such as it had under the
Cæsars, just before the burning of the harlot and of itself with
her. So HIPPOLYTUS [On Antichrist] (who
lived in the second century), thought. Popery cannot be at one and the
same time the "mystery of iniquity," and the manifested
or revealed Antichrist. Probably it will compromise for
political power
(Re 17:3)
the portion of Christianity still in its creed, and thus shall prepare
the way for Antichrist's manifestation. The name Babylon, which in the
image,
Da 2:32, 38,
is given to the head, is here given to the harlot, which marks
her as being connected with the fourth kingdom, Rome, the last part of
the image. Benedict XIII, in his indiction for a jubilee, A.D. 1725, called Rome "the mother of all
believers, and the mistress of all churches" (harlots like herself).
The correspondence of syllables and accents in Greek is
striking; "He porne kai to therion; He numphe kai to arnion."
"The whore and the beast; the Bride and the Lamb."
of harlots--Greek, "of the harlots and of
the abominations." Not merely Rome, but Christendom as a whole,
even as formerly Israel as a whole, has become a harlot. The invisible
Church of true believers is hidden and dispersed in the visible Church.
The boundary lines which separate harlot and woman are not
denominational nor drawn externally, but can only be spiritually
discerned. If Rome were the only seat of Babylon, much of the
spiritual profit of Revelation would be lost to us; but the harlot
"sitteth upon many waters"
(Re 17:1),
and "ALL nations have drunk of the wine of her
fornication"
(Re 17:2;
Re 18:3;
"the earth,"
Re 19:2).
External extensiveness over the whole world and internal conformity to
the world--worldliness in extent and contents--is symbolized by the
name of the world city, "Babylon." As the sun shines on all the earth,
thus the woman clothed with the sun is to let her light penetrate to
the uttermost parts of the earth. But she, in externally Christianizing
the world, permits herself to be seduced by the world; thus her
universality or catholicity is not that of the Jerusalem which
we look for ("the MOTHER of us all,"
Re 21:2;
Isa 2:2-4;
Ga 4:26),
but that of Babylon, the world-wide but harlot city! (As Babylon
was destroyed, and the Jews restored to Jerusalem by Cyrus, so our
Cyrus--a Persian name meaning the sun--the Sun of righteousness,
shall bring Israel, literal and spiritual, to the holy Jerusalem at His
coming. Babylon and Jerusalem are the two opposite poles of the
spiritual world). Still, the Romish Church is not only accidentally and
as a matter of fact, but in virtue of its very
PRINCIPLE, a harlot, the metropolis of whoredom,
"the mother of harlots"; whereas the evangelical Protestant Church is,
according to her principle and fundamental creed, a chaste woman; the
Reformation was a protest of the woman against the harlot. The spirit
of the heathen world kingdom Rome had, before the Reformation, changed
the Church in the West into a Church-State, Rome; and in the
East, into a State-Church, fettered by the world power, having
its center in Byzantium; the Roman and Greek churches have thus fallen
from the invisible spiritual essence of the Gospel into the elements of
the world [AUBERLEN]. Compare with the "woman"
called "Babylon" here, the woman named "wickedness," or "lawlessness,"
"iniquity"
(Zec 5:7, 8, 11),
carried to Babylon: compare "the mystery of iniquity" and "the
man of sin," "that wicked one," literally, "the lawless
one"
(2Th 2:7, 8;
also
Mt 24:12).
6. martyrs--witnesses.
I wondered with great admiration--As the Greek is the
same in the verb and the noun, translate the latter "wonder." John
certainly did not admire her in the modern English sense.
Elsewhere
(Re 17:8; 13:3),
all the earthly-minded ("they that dwell on the earth") wonder
in admiration of the beast. Here only is John's wonder called
forth; not the beast, but the woman sunken into the harlot, the
Church become a world-loving apostate, moves his sorrowful astonishment
at so awful a change. That the world should be beastly is natural, but
that the faithful bride should become the whore is monstrous, and
excites the same amazement in him as the same awful change in Israel
excited in Isaiah and Jeremiah. "Horrible thing" in them answers to
"abominations" here. "Corruptio optimi pessima"; when the Church
falls, she sinks lower than the godless world, in proportion as her
right place is higher than the world. It is striking that in
Re 17:3,
"woman" has not the article, "the woman," as if she had been
before mentioned: for though identical in one sense with the
woman,
Re 12:1-6,
in another sense she is not. The elect are never perverted into
apostates, and still remain as the true woman invisibly
contained in the harlot; yet Christendom regarded as the
woman has apostatized from its first faith.
8. beast . . . was, and is not--(Compare
Re 17:11).
The time when the beast "is not" is the time during which it has "the
deadly wound"; the time of the seventh head becoming Christian
externally, when its beast-like character was put into suspension
temporarily. The healing of its wound answers to its
ascending out of the bottomless pit. The beast, or Antichristian
world power, returns worse than ever, with satanic powers from hell
(Re 11:7),
not merely from the sea of convulsed nations
(Re 13:1).
Christian civilization gives the beast only a temporary wound, whence
the deadly wound is always mentioned in connection with its
being healed up the non-existence of the beast in connection
with its reappearance; and Daniel does not even notice any change in
the world power effected by Christianity. We are endangered on one side
by the spurious Christianity of the harlot, on the other by the open
Antichristianity of the beast; the third class is Christ's little
flock."
go--So B, Vulgate, and ANDREAS read
the future tense. But A and IRENÆUS,
"goeth."
into perdition--The continuance of this revived seventh (that
is, the eighth) head is short: it is therefore called "the son of
perdition," who is essentially doomed to it almost immediately after
his appearance.
names were--so Vulgate and ANDREAS.
But A, B, Syriac, and Coptic read the singular, "name
is."
written in--Greek, "upon."
which--rather, "when they behold the beast that it was,"
&c. So Vulgate.
was, and is not, and yet is--A, B, and
ANDREAS read, "and shall come" (literally, "be
present," namely, again: Greek, "kai parestai"). The
Hebrew, "tetragrammaton," or sacred four letters in
Jehovah, "who is, who was, and who is to come," the believer's
object of worship, has its contrasted counterpart in the beast "who
was, and is not, and shall be present," the object of the earth's
worship [BENGEL]. They exult with wonder in
seeing that the beast which had seemed to have received its death blow
from Christianity, is on the eve of reviving with greater power
than ever on the ruins of that religion which tormented them
(Re 11:10).
9. Compare
Re 13:18;
Da 12:10,
where similarly spiritual discernment is put forward as needed in order
to understand the symbolical prophecy.
seven heads and seven mountains--The connection between
mountains and kings must be deeper than the mere outward fact to
which incidental allusion is made, that Rome (the then world city) is
on seven hills (whence heathen Rome had a national festival called
Septimontium, the feast of the seven-hilled city
[PLUTARCH]; and on the imperial coins, just as
here, she is represented as a woman seated on seven hills. Coin
of Vespasian, described by CAPTAIN
SMYTH [Roman Coins, p. 310;
ACKERMAN, 1, p. 87]). The seven heads can hardly
be at once seven kings or kingdoms
(Re 17:10),
and seven geographical mountains. The true connection is, as the
head is the prominent part of the body, so the mountain
is prominent in the land. Like "sea" and "earth"and "waters
. . . peoples"
(Re 17:15),
so "mountains" have a symbolical meaning, namely, prominent seats of
power. Especially such as are prominent hindrances to the cause of God
(Ps 68:16, 17;
Isa 40:4; 41:15; 49:11;
Eze 35:2);
especially Babylon (which geographically was in a plain, but
spiritually is called a destroying mountain,
Jer 51:25),
in majestic contrast to which stands Mount Zion, "the mountain of the
Lord's house"
(Isa 2:2),
and the heavenly mount;
Re 21:10,
"a great and high mountain . . . and that great city, the
holy Jerusalem." So in
Da 2:35,
the stone becomes a mountain--Messiah's universal kingdom
supplanting the previous world kingdoms. As nature shadows forth the
great realities of the spiritual world, so seven-hilled Rome is a
representative of the seven-headed world power of which the dragon has
been, and is the prince. The "seven kings" are hereby distinguished
from the "ten kings"
(Re 17:12):
the former are what the latter are
not, "mountains," great seats of the world power. The seven universal
God-opposed monarchies are Egypt (the first world power which came into
collision with God's people,) Assyria, Babylon, Greece, Medo-Persia,
Rome, the Germanic-Slavonic empire (the clay of the fourth kingdom
mixed with its iron in Nebuchadnezzar's image, a fifth material,
Da 2:33, 34, 42, 43,
symbolizing this last head). These seven might seem not to accord with
the seven heads in
Da 7:4-7,
one head on the first beast (Babylon), one on the second
(Medo-Persia), four on the third (Greece; namely, Egypt, Syria,
Thrace with Bithynia, and Greece with Macedon): but Egypt and Greece
are in both lists. Syria answers to Assyria (from which the name Syria
is abbreviated), and Thrace with Bithynia answers to the
Gothic-Germanic-Slavonic hordes which, pouring down on Rome from the
North, founded the Germanic-Slavonic empire. The woman sitting on
the seven hills implies the Old and New Testament Church conforming
to, and resting on, the world power, that is, on all the seven world
kingdoms. Abraham and Isaac dissembling as to their wives through fear
of the kings of Egypt foreshadowed this. Compare
Eze 16:1-63; 23:1-49,
on Israel's whoredoms with Egypt, Assyria, Babylon; and
Mt 7:24; 24:10-12, 23-26,
on the characteristics of the New Testament Church's harlotry, namely,
distrust, suspicion, hatred, treachery, divisions into parties, false
doctrine.
10. there are--Translate, "they (the seven heads) are seven
kings."
five . . . one--Greek, "the five
. . . the one"; the first five of the seven are fallen
(a word applicable not to forms of government passing away, but
to the fall of once powerful empires: Egypt,
Eze 29:1-30:26;
Assyria and Nineveh,
Na 3:1-19;
Babylon,
Re 18:2;
Jer 50:1-51:64;
Medo-Persia,
Da 8:3-7, 20-22; 10:13; 11:2;
Greece,
Da 11:4).
Rome was "the one" existing in John's days. "Kings" is the
Scripture phrase for kingdoms, because these kingdoms are
generally represented in character by some one prominent head, as
Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar, Medo-Persia by Cyrus, Greece by
Alexander, &c.
the other is not yet come--not as ALFORD,
inaccurately representing AUBERLEN, the
Christian empire beginning with Constantine; but, the
Germanic-Slavonic empire beginning and continuing in its
beast-like, that is, HEATHEN Antichristian
character for only "a short space." The time when it is said of it, "it
is not"
(Re 17:11),
is the time during which it is "wounded to death," and has the
"deadly wound"
(Re 13:3).
The external Christianization of the migrating hordes from the North
which descended on Rome, is the wound to the beast answering to
the earth swallowing up the flood (heathen tribes) sent by the
dragon, Satan, to drown the woman, the Church. The emphasis palpably is
on "a short space," which therefore comes first in the
Greek, not on "he must continue," as if his continuance for
some [considerable] time were implied, as ALFORD wrongly thinks. The time of external
Christianization (while the beast's wound continues) has lasted for
centuries, ever since Constantine. Rome and the Greek Church have
partially healed the wound by image worship.
11. beast that . . . is not--his beastly character
being kept down by outward Christianization of the state until he
starts up to life again as "the eighth" king, his "wound being healed"
(Re 13:3),
Antichrist manifested in fullest and most intense opposition to God.
The "he" is emphatic in the Greek. He, peculiarly and
pre-eminently: answering to "the little horn" with eyes like the eyes
of a man, and a mouth speaking great things, before whom three of
the ten horns were plucked up by the roots, and to whom the whole
ten "give their power and strength"
(Re 17:12, 13, 17).
That a personal Antichrist will stand at the head of the
Antichristian kingdom, is likely from the analogy of Antiochus
Epiphanes, the Old Testament Antichrist, "the little horn" in
Da 8:9-12;
also, "the man of sin, son of perdition"
(2Th 2:3-8),
answers here to "goeth into perdition," and is applied to an
individual, namely, Judas, in the only other passage where the phrase
occurs
(Joh 17:12).
He is essentially a child of destruction, and hence he has but a little
time ascended out of the bottomless pit, when he "goes into perdition"
(Re 17:8, 11).
"While the Church passes through death of the flesh to glory of the
Spirit, the beast passes through the glory of the flesh to death"
[AUBERLEN].
is of the seven--rather "springs out of the seven." The
eighth is not merely one of the seven restored, but a new power or
person proceeding out of the seven, and at the same time
embodying all the God-opposed features of the previous seven
concentrated and consummated; for which reason there are said to be not
eight, but only seven heads, for the eighth is the
embodiment of all the seven. In the birth-pangs which prepare the
"regeneration" there are wars, earthquakes, and
disturbances [AUBERLEN], wherein Antichrist
takes his rise ("sea,"
Re 13:1;
Mr 13:8;
Lu 21:9-11).
He does not fall like the other seven
(Re 17:10),
but is destroyed, going to his own perdition, by the Lord
in person.
12. ten kings . . . received no kingdom as yet; but
receive power as kings . . . with the beast--Hence and
from
Re 17:14, 16,
it seems that these ten kings or kingdoms, are to be contemporaries
with the beast in its last or eighth form, namely, Antichrist. Compare
Da 2:34, 44,
"the stone smote the image upon his feet," that is, upon the
ten toes, which are, in
Da 2:41-44,
interpreted to be "kings." The ten kingdoms are not, therefore,
ten which arose in the overthrow of Rome (heathen), but are to rise out
of the last state of the fourth kingdom under the eighth head. I agree
with ALFORD that the phrase "as kings,"
implies that they reserve their kingly rights in their alliance with
the beast, wherein "they give their power and strength unto" him
(Re 17:13).
They have the name of kings, but not with undivided kingly power
[WORDSWORTH]. See AUBERLEN'S
not so probable view, see on
Re 17:3.
one hour--a definite time of short duration,
during which "the devil is come down to the inhabitant of the earth and
of the sea, having great wrath, because he knoweth that he hath but a
short time." Probably the three and a half years
(Re 11:2, 3; 13:5).
Antichrist is in existence long before the fall of Babylon; but it is
only at its fail he obtains the vassalage of the ten kings. He in the
first instance imposes on the Jews as the Messiah, coming in his own
name; then persecutes those of them who refuse his blasphemous
pretensions. Not until the sixth vial, in the latter part of his reign,
does he associate the ten kings with him in war with the Lamb, having
gained them over by the aid of the spirits of devils working miracles.
His connection with Israel appears from his sitting "in the temple of
God"
(2Th 2:4),
and as the antitypical "abomination of desolation standing in the Holy
place"
(Da 9:27; 12:11;
Mt 24:15),
and "in the city where our Lord was crucified"
(Re 11:8).
It is remarkable that IRENÆUS [Against
Heresies, 5:25] and CYRIL OF JERUSALEM [RUFINUS, Historia
Monachorum, 10.37] prophesied that Antichrist would have his seat
at Jerusalem and would restore the kingdom of the Jews. JULIAN the apostate, long after, took part with the Jews,
and aided in building their temple, herein being Antichrist's
forerunner.
13. one mind--one sentiment.
shall give--So Coptic. But A, B, and Syriac,
"give."
strength--Greek, "authority." They become his dependent
allies
(Re 17:14).
Thus Antichrist sets up to be King of kings, but scarcely has he
put forth his claim when the true KING OF KINGS
appears and dashes him down in a moment to destruction.
14. These shall . . . war with the Lamb--in league
with the beast. This is a summary anticipation of
Re 19:19.
This shall not be till after they have first executed judgment
on the harlot
(Re 17:15, 16).
Lord of lords, &c.--anticipating
Re 19:16.
are--not in the Greek. Therefore translate, "And
they that are with Him, called chosen, and faithful (shall overcome
them, namely, the beast and his allied kings)." These have been with
Christ in heaven unseen, but now appear with Him.
15.
(Re 17:1;
Isa 8:7.)
An impious parody of Jehovah who "sitteth upon the flood"
[ALFORD]. Also, contrast the "many waters"
Re 19:6,
"Alleluia."
peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues--The
"peoples," &c., here mark the universality of the spiritual fornication
of the Church. The "tongues" remind us of the original Babel, the
confusion of tongues, the beginning of Babylon, and the first
commencement of idolatrous apostasy after the flood, as the tower was
doubtless dedicated to the deified heavens. Thus, Babylon is the
appropriate name of the harlot. The Pope, as the chief representative
of the harlot, claims a double supremacy over all peoples,
typified by the "two swords" according to the interpretation of
Boniface VIII in the Bull, "Unam Sanctam," and represented by
the two keys: spiritual as the universal bishop, whence he is crowned
with the miter; and temporal, whence he is also crowned with the tiara
in token of his imperial supremacy. Contrast with the Pope's
diadems the "many diadems" of Him who alone has claim to, and
shall exercise when He shall come, the twofold dominion
(Re 19:12).
16. upon the beast--But A, B, Vulgate, and Syriac
read, "and the beast."
shall make her desolate--having first dismounted her from her
seat on the beast
(Re 17:3).
naked--stripped of all her gaud
(Re 17:4).
As Jerusalem used the world power to crucify her Saviour, and then was
destroyed by that very power, Rome; so the Church, having apostatized
to the world, shall have judgment executed on her first by the world
power, the beast and his allies; and these afterwards shall have
judgment executed on them by Christ Himself in person. So Israel
leaning on Egypt, a broken reed, is pierced by it; and then Egypt
itself is punished. So Israel's whoredom with Assyria and Babylon was
punished by the Assyrian and Babylonian captivities. So the Church when
it goes a-whoring after the word as if it were the reality,
instead of witnessing against its apostasy from God, is false to its
profession. Being no longer a reality itself, but a sham, the Church is
rightly judged by that world which for a time had used the Church to
further its own ends, while all the while "hating" Christ's unworldly
religion, but which now no longer wants the Church's aid.
eat her flesh--Greek plural, "masses of flesh," that is,
"carnal possessions"; implying the fulness of carnality into which the
Church is sunk. The judgment on the harlot is again and again described
(Re 18:1; 19:5);
first by an "angel having great power"
(Re 18:1),
then by "another voice from heaven"
(Re 18:4-20),
then by "a mighty angel"
(Re 18:21-24).
Compare
Eze 16:37-44,
originally said of Israel, but further applicable to the New Testament
Church when fallen into spiritual fornication. On the phrase, "eat
. . . flesh" for prey upon one's property, and injure the
character and person, compare
Ps 14:4; 27:2;
Jer 10:25;
Mic 3:3.
The First Napoleon's Edict published at Rome in 1809, confiscating the
papal dominions and joining them to France, and later the severance of
large portions of the Pope's territory from his sway and the union of
them to the dominions of the king of Italy, virtually through Louis
Napoleon, are a first instalment of the full realization of this
prophecy of the whore's destruction. "Her flesh" seems to point to her
temporal dignities and resources, as distinguished from "herself"
(Greek). How striking a retribution, that having obtained her
first temporal dominions, the exarchate of Ravenna, the kingdom of the
LOMBARDs, and the state of Rome, by recognizing
the usurper Pepin as lawful king of France, she should be
stripped of her dominions by another usurper of France, the Napoleonic
dynasty!
burn . . . with fire--the legal punishment of an
abominable fornication.
17. hath put--the prophetical past tense for the future.
fulfil--Greek, "do," or "accomplish." The Greek,
"poiesai," is distinct from that which is translated,
"fulfilled," Greek, "telesthesontai," below.
his will--Greek, "his mind," or purpose; while
they think only of doing their own purpose.
to agree--literally, "to do" (or accomplish) one mind" or
"purpose." A and Vulgate omit this clause, but B supports it.
the words of God--foretelling the rise and downfall of the
beast; Greek, "hoi logoi," in A, B, and
ANDREAS. English Version reading is
Greek, "ta rhemata," which is not well supported. No mere
articulate utterances, but the efficient words of Him who is
the Word: Greek, "logos."
fulfilled--
(Re 10:7).
18. reigneth--literally, "hath kingship over the kings."
The harlot cannot be a mere city literally, but is called so in
a spiritual sense
(Re 11:8).
Also the beast cannot represent a spiritual power, but a world power.
In this verse the harlot is presented before us ripe for judgment. The
eighteenth chapter details that judgment.
CHAPTER 18
Re 18:1-24.
BABYLON'S
FALL:
GOD'S
PEOPLE
CALLED
OUT OF
HER:
THE
KINGS AND
MERCHANTS OF THE
EARTH
MOURN,
WHILE THE
SAINTS
REJOICE AT
HER
FALL.
1. And--so Vulgate and ANDREAS. But
A, B, Syriac, and Coptic omit "And."
power--Greek, "authority."
lightened--"illumined."
with--Greek, "owing to."
2. mightily . . . strong--not supported by
manuscripts. But A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic read,
"with (literally, 'in') a mighty voice."
is fallen, is fallen--so A, Vulgate, Syriac, and
ANDREAS. But B and Coptic omit the second
"is fallen"
(Isa 21:9;
Jer 51:8).
This phrase is here prophetical of her fall, still future, as
Re 18:4
proves.
devils--Greek, "demons."
the hold--a keep or prison.
3. drunk--
Re 14:8,
from which perhaps "the wine" may have been interpolated. They have
drunk of her fornication, the consequence of which will be
wrath to themselves. But A, B, and C read, "(owing to the wrath
of her fornication all nations) have fallen." Vulgate and
most versions read as English Version, which may be the right
reading though not supported by the oldest manuscripts. Babylon, the
whore, is destroyed before the beast slays the two witnesses
(Re 11:7),
and then the beast himself is destroyed.
the wine--so B, Syriac, and Coptic. But A, C, and
Vulgate omit.
abundance--literally, "power."
delicacies--Greek, "luxury." See on
1Ti 5:11,
where the Greek verb "wax wanton" is akin to the noun here.
Translate, "wanton luxury." The reference is not to earthly
merchandise, but to spiritual wares, indulgences, idolatries,
superstitions, worldly compromises, wherewith the harlot, that is, the
apostate Church, has made merchandise of men. This applies
especially to Rome; but the Greek, and even in a less degree
Protestant churches, are not guiltless. However, the principle
of evangelical Protestantism is pure, but the principle of Rome
and the Greek church is not so.
4. Come out of her, my people--quoted from
Jer 50:8; 51:6, 45.
Even in the Romish Church God has a people: but they are in great
danger; their only safety is in coming out of her at once. So also in
every apostate or world-conforming church there are some of God's
invisible and true Church, who, if they would be safe, must come out.
Especially at the eve of God's judgment on apostate Christendom: as Lot
was warned to come out of Sodom just before its destruction, and Israel
to come from about the tents of Dathan and Abiram. So the first
Christians came out of Jerusalem when the apostate Jewish Church was
judged. "State and Church are precious gifts of God. But the State
being desecrated to a different end from what God designed it, namely.
to govern for, and as under, God, becomes beast-like; the Church
apostatizing becomes the harlot. The true woman is the kernel: beast
and harlot are the shell: whenever the kernel is mature, the shell is
thrown away" [AUBERLEN]. "The harlot is not Rome
alone (though she is pre-eminently so), but every Church that has not
Christ's mind and spirit. False Christendom, divided into very many
sects, is truly Babylon, that is, confusion. However, in all
Christendom the true Jesus-congregation, the woman clothed with the
sun, lives and is hidden. Corrupt, lifeless Christendom is the harlot,
whose great aim is the pleasure of the flesh, and which is governed by
the spirit of nature and the world" [HAHN in
AUBERLEN]. The first justification of the woman is
in her being called out of Babylon the harlot, as the culminating stage
of the latter's sin, when judgment is about to fall: for apostate
Christendom, Babylon, is not to be converted, but to be destroyed.
Secondly, she has to pass through an ordeal of persecution from the
beast, which purifies and prepares her for the transfiguration glory at
Christ's coming
(Re 20:4;
Lu 21:28).
be not partakers--Greek, "have no fellowship with
her sins."
that ye receive not of her plagues--as Lot's wife, by lingering
too near the polluted and doomed city.
5. her sins--as a great heap.
reached--Greek, "reached so far as to come into close
contact with, and to cleave unto."
6. Addressed to the executioners of God's wrath.
Reward--Greek, "repay."
she rewarded--English Version reading adds "you" with
none of the oldest manuscripts. But A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac,
and Coptic omit it. She had not rewarded or repaid
the world power for some injury which the world power had inflicted on
her; but she had given the world power that which was its
due, namely, spiritual delusions, because it did not like to
retain God in its knowledge; the unfaithful Church's principle was,
"Populus vult decipi, et decipiatur." "The people like to be
deceived, and let them be deceived."
double--of sorrow. Contrast with this the double of joy
which Jerusalem shall receive for her past suffering
(Isa 61:7;
Zec 9:12);
even as she has received double punishment for her sins
(Isa 40:2).
unto her--So Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. A, B, and C omit it.
in the cup--
(Re 18:3;
Re 14:8; 17:4).
filled--literally "mixed."
fill to her double--of the Lord's cup of wrath.
7. How much--that is in proportion as.
lived deliciously--luxuriously: see on
Re 18:3,
where the Greek is akin.
sorrow--Greek, "mourning," as for a dead husband.
I sit--so Vulgate. But A, B, and C prefix "that."
I . . . am no widow--for the world power is my husband
and my supporter.
shall see no sorrow--Greek, "mourning." "I am seated
(this long time) . . . I am no widow
. . . I shall see no sorrow," marks her complete
unconcerned security as to the past, present, and future
[BENGEL]. I shall never have to mourn as one
bereft of her husband. As Babylon was queen of the East, so Rome has
been queen of the West, and is called on Imperial coins "the
eternal city." So Papal Rome is called by
AMMIAN MARCELLIN [15.7].
"Babylon is a former Rome, and Rome a latter Babylon. Rome is a
daughter of Babylon, and by her, as by her mother, God has been pleased
to subdue the world under one sway" [AUGUSTINE].
As the Jew's restoration did not take place till Babylon's fall, so R.
KIMCHI on Obadiah, writes, "When Rome (Edom) shall
be devastated, there shall be redemption to Israel." Romish idolatries
have been the great stumbling-blocks to the Jews' acceptance of
Christianity.
8. death--on herself, though she thought herself secure even
from the death of her husband.
mourning--instead of her feasting.
famine--instead of her luxurious delicacies
(Re 18:3, 7).
fire--(See on
Re 17:16).
Literal fire may burn the literal city of Rome, which is situated in
the midst of volcanic agencies. As the ground was cursed for Adam's
sin, and the earth under Noah was sunk beneath the flood, and Sodom was
burnt with fire, so may Rome be. But as the harlot is mystical (the
whole faithless Church), the burning may be mainly mystical,
symbolizing utter destruction and removal. BENGEL
is probably right in thinking Rome will once more rise to power. The
carnal, faithless, and worldly elements in all churches, Roman, Greek,
and Protestant, tend towards one common center, and prepare the way for
the last form of the beast, namely, Antichrist. The Pharisees were in
the main sound in creed, yet judgment fell on them as on the unsound
Sadducees and half-heathenish Samaritans. So faithless and adulterous,
carnal, worldly Protestant churches, will not escape for their
soundness of creed.
the Lord--so B, C, Syriac, and
ANDREAS. But A and Vulgate omit. "Strong"
is the meaning of God's Hebrew name, "EL."
judgeth--But A, B, and C read the past tense
(Greek, "krinas"), "who hath judged her": the
prophetical past for the future: the charge in
Re 18:4
to God's people to come out of her implies that the judgment was
not yet actually executed.
9. lived deliciously--Greek, "luxuriated." The faithless
Church, instead of reproving, connived at the self-indulgent luxury of
the great men of this world, and sanctioned it by her own practice.
Contrast the world's rejoicing over the dead bodies of the two
witnesses
(Re 11:10)
who had tormented it by their faithfulness, with its
lamentations over the harlot who had made the way to heaven
smooth, and had been found a useful tool in keeping subjects in abject
tyranny. Men's carnal mind relishes a religion like that of the
apostate Church, which gives an opiate to conscience, while leaving the
sinner license to indulge his lusts.
bewail her--A, B, C, Syriac, Coptic, and
CYPRIAN omit "her."
10. God's judgments inspire fear even in the worldly, but it is
of short duration, for the kings and great men soon attach themselves
to the beast in its last and worst shape, as open Antichrist, claiming
all that the harlot had claimed in blasphemous pretensions and more,
and so making up to them for the loss of the harlot.
mighty--Rome in Greek means strength;
though that derivation is doubtful.
11. shall--So. B. But A and C read the present, "weep and
mourn."
merchandise--Greek, "cargo": wares carried in
ships: ship-lading (compare
Re 18:17).
Rome was not a commercial city, and is not likely from her position to
be so. The merchandise must therefore be spiritual, even as the
harlot is not literal, but spiritual. She did not witness against
carnal luxury and pleasure-seeking, the source of the merchants'
gains, but conformed to them
(Re 18:7).
She cared not for the sheep, but for the wool. Professing Christian
merchants in her lived as if this world not heaven, were the reality,
and were unscrupulous as to the means of getting gain. Compare
Notes, see on
Zec 5:4-11,
on the same subject, the judgment on mystical Babylon's
merchants for unjust gain. All the merchandise here mentioned occurs
repeatedly in the Roman Ceremonial.
12. (See on
Re 17:4).
stones . . . pearls--Greek, "stone
. . . pearl."
fine linen--A, B, and C read Greek, "bussinou" for
"bussou," that is, "fine linen manufacture"
[ALFORD]. The manufacture for which Egypt
(the type of the apostate Church,
Re 11:8)
was famed. Contrast "the fine linen"
(Eze 16:10)
put on Israel, and on the New Testament Church
(Re 19:8),
the Bride, by God
(Ps 132:9).
thyine wood--the citrus of the Romans: probably the
cypressus thyoyides, or the thuia articulata. "Citron
wood" [ALFORD]. A sweet-smelling tree of Cyrene in
Lybia, used for incense.
all manner vessels--Greek, "every vessel," or
"furniture."
13. cinnamon--designed by God for better purposes: being an
ingredient in the holy anointing oil, and a plant in the garden of the
Beloved
(So 4:14);
but desecrated to vile uses by the adulteress
(Pr 7:17).
odours--of incense. A, C, Vulgate, and Syriac
prefix "and amomium" (a precious hair ointment made from an Asiatic
shrub). English Version reading is supported by Coptic
and ANDREAS, but not oldest manuscripts.
ointments--Greek, "ointment."
frankincense--Contrast the true "incense" which God loves
(Ps 141:2;
Mal 1:11).
fine flour--the similago of the Latins
[ALFORD].
beasts--of burden: cattle.
slaves--Greek, "bodies."
souls of men--
(Eze 27:13).
Said of slaves. Appropriate to the spiritual harlot, apostate
Christendom, especially Rome, which has so often enslaved both
bodies and souls of men. Though the New Testament does
not directly forbid slavery, which would, in the then state of the
world, have incited a slave revolt, it virtually condemns it, as here.
Popery has derived its greatest gains from the sale of masses for
the souls of men after death, and of indulgences purchased from
the Papal chancery by rich merchants in various countries, to be
retailed at a profit [MOSHEIM, III, 95, 96].
14. Direct address to Babylon.
the fruits that thy soul lusted after--Greek, "thy
autumn-ripe fruits of the lust (eager desire) of the soul."
dainty--Greek, "fat": "sumptuous" in food.
goodly--"splendid," "bright," in dress and equipage.
departed--supported by none of our manuscripts. But A, B, C,
Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic read, "perished."
thou shalt--A, C, Vulgate, and Syriac read,
"They (men) shall no more find them at all."
15. of these things--of the things mentioned,
Re 18:12, 13.
which--"who."
made rich by--Greek, "derived riches from her."
stand afar off for the fear--(Compare
Re 18:10).
wailing--Greek, "mourning."
16. And--so Vulgate and ANDREAS. But
A, B, and C omit.
decked--literally, "glided."
stones . . . pearls--Greek, "stone
. . . pearl." B and ANDREAS read
"pearls." But A and C, "pearl."
17. is come to naught--Greek, "is desolated."
shipmaster--Greek, "steersman," or "pilot."
all the company in ships--A, C, Vulgate, and
Syriac read, "Every one who saileth to a place" (B has
". . . to the place"), every voyager. Vessels
were freighted with pilgrims to various shrines, so that in one month
(A.D. 1300) two hundred thousand pilgrims were
counted in Rome [D'AAUBIGNE, Histoire de la
Reformation]: a source of gain, not only to the Papal see, but to
shipmasters, merchants, pilots, &c. These latter, however, are
not restricted to those literally "shipmasters," &c., but mainly refer,
in the mystical sense, to all who share in the spiritual traffic of
apostate Christendom.
18. when they saw--Greek, "horontes." But A, B, C,
and ANDREAS read, Greek,
"blepontes," "looking at." Greek, "blepo," is to
use the eyes, to look: the act of seeing without thought
of the object seen. Greek, "horao," refers to the thing
seen or presented to the eyes [TITTMANN].
smoke--so B, C. But A reads "place."
What city is like--Compare the similar beast as to the
beast,
Re 13:4:
so closely do the harlot and beast approximate one another. Contrast
the attribution of this praise to God, to whom alone it is due, by
His servants
(Ex 15:11).
MARTIAL says of Rome, "Nothing is equal to her;"
and ATHENÆUS, "She is the epitome of the
world."
19. wailing--"mourning."
that had ships--A, B, and C read, "that had their ships":
literally, "the ships."
costliness--her costly treasures: abstract for concrete.
20. holy apostles--So C reads. But A, B, Vulgate, Syriac,
Coptic, and ANDREAS read, "Ye saints and
ye apostles."
avenged you on her--Greek, "judged your judgment on
(literally, exacting it from) her." "There is more joy in heaven
at the harlot's downfall than at that of the two beasts. For the most
heinous of all sin is the sin of those who know God's word of grace,
and keep it not. The worldliness of the Church is the most worldly of
all worldliness. Hence, Babylon, in Revelation, has not only Israel's
sins, but also the sins of the heathen; and John dwells longer on the
abominations and judgments of the harlot than on those of the beast.
The term 'harlot' describes the false Church's essential character. She
retains her human shape as the woman, does not become a
beast: she has the form of godliness, but denies its power. Her
rightful lord and husband, Jehovah-Christ, and the joys and goods of
His house, are no longer her all in all, but she runs after the visible
and vain things of the world, in its manifold forms. The fullest form
of her whoredom is, where the Church wishes to be itself a worldly
power, uses politics and diplomacy, makes flesh her arm, uses unholy
means for holy ends, spreads her dominion by sword or money, fascinates
men by sensual ritualism, becomes 'mistress of ceremonies' to the
dignitaries of the world, flatters prince or people, and like Israel,
seeks the help of one world power against the danger threatening from
another" [AUBERLEN]. Judgment, therefore,
begins with the harlot, as in privileges the house of
God.
21. a--Greek, "one."
millstone--Compare the judgment on the Egyptian hosts at the Red
Sea,
Ex 15:5, 10;
Ne 9:11,
and the foretold doom of Babylon, the world power,
Jer 51:63, 64.
with violence--Greek, "with impetus." This verse shows
that this prophecy is regarded as still to be fulfilled.
22. pipers--flute players. "Musicians," painters and sculptors,
have desecrated their art to lend fascination to the sensuous worship
of corrupt Christendom.
craftsman--artisan.
23. What a blessed contrast is
Re 22:5,
respecting the city of God: "They need no candle (just as
Babylon shall no more have the light of a candle, but for
a widely different reason), for the Lord God giveth them light."
candle--Translate as Greek, "lamp."
bridegroom . . . bride . . . no more
. . . in thee--Contrast the heavenly city, with its
Bridegroom, Bride, and blessed marriage supper
(Re 19:7, 9; 21:2, 9;
Isa 62:4, 5).
thy merchants were--So most of the best authorities read. But A
omits the Greek article before "merchants," and then translates,
"The great men of . . . were thy merchants."
sorceries--Greek, "sorcery."
24. Applied by Christ
(Mt 23:35)
to apostate Jerusalem, which proves that not merely the literal city
Rome, and the Church of Rome (though the chief representative of
the apostasy), but the WHOLE of the faithless
Church of both the Old and New Testament is meant by Babylon the
harlot; just as the whole Church (Old and New Testament) is meant by
"the woman"
(Re 12:1).
As to literal city, ARINGHUS in
BENGEL says, Pagan Rome was the "general shambles"
for slaying the sheep of Jesus. FRED. SEYLER in BENGEL calculates that
papal Rome, between A.D. 1540 and 1580, slew more
than nine hundred thousand Protestants. Three reasons for the harlot's
downfall are given: (1) The worldly greatness of her
merchants, which was due to unholy traffic in spiritual things.
(2) Her sorceries, or juggling tricks, in which the false
prophet that ministers to the beast in its last form shall exceed her;
compare "sorcerers"
(Re 21:8; 22:15),
specially mentioned among those doomed to the lake of fire. (3) Her
persecution of (Old Testament) "prophets" and (New Testament)
"saints."
CHAPTER 19
Re 19:1-21.
THE
CHURCH'S
THANKSGIVING IN
HEAVEN FOR THE
JUDGMENT ON THE
HARLOT.
THE
MARRIAGE OF THE
LAMB:
THE
SUPPER:
THE
BRIDE'S
PREPARATION:
JOHN
IS
FORBIDDEN TO
WORSHIP THE
ANGEL:
THE
LORD AND
HIS
HOSTS
COME
FORTH FOR
WAR:
THE
BEAST AND THE
FALSE
PROPHET
CAST INTO THE
LAKE OF
FIRE:
THE
KINGS AND
THEIR
FOLLOWERS
SLAIN BY THE
SWORD
OUT OF
CHRIST'S
MOUTH.
1. As in the case of the opening of the prophecy,
Re 4:8; 5:9,
&c.; so now, at one of the great closing events seen in vision, the
judgment on the harlot (described in
Re 18:1-24),
there is a song of praise in heaven to God: compare
Re 7:10,
&c., toward the close of the seals, and
Re 11:15-18,
at the close of the trumpets:
Re 15:3,
at the saints' victory over the beast.
And--so ANDREAS. But A, B, C, Vulgate,
Syriac, and Coptic omit.
a great voice--A, B, C, Vulgate, Coptic, and
ANDREAS read, "as it were a great voice."
What a contrast to the lamentations
Re 18:1-24!
Compare
Jer 51:48.
The great manifestation of God's power in destroying Babylon
calls forth a great voice of praise in heaven.
people--Greek, "multitude."
Alleluia--Hebrew, "Praise ye JAH,"
or JEHOVAH: here first used in Revelation, whence
ELLICOTT infers the Jews bear a prominent
part in this thanksgiving. JAH is not a
contraction of "JEHOVAH," as it sometimes occurs
jointly with the latter. It means "He who Is": whereas Jehovah is "He
who will be, is, and was." It implies God experienced as a
PRESENT help; so that "Hallelujah," says
KIMCHI in BENGEL, is found
first in the Psalms on the destruction of the ungodly.
"Hallelu-Jah" occurs four times in this passage. Compare
Ps 149:4-9,
which is plainly parallel, and indeed identical in many of the phrases,
as well as the general idea. Israel, especially, will join in the
Hallelujah, when "her warfare is accomplished" and her foe destroyed.
Salvation, &c.--Greek, "The salvation
. . . the glory . . . the power."
and honour--so Coptic. But A, B, C, and Syriac
omit.
unto the Lord our God--so ANDREAS. But A,
B, C, and Coptic read, "(Is) of our God," that is, belongs to
Him.
2. which did corrupt the earth--Greek, "used to
corrupt" continually. "Instead of opposing and lessening, she promoted
the sinful life and decay of the world by her own earthliness, allowing
the salt to lose its savor" [AUBERLEN].
avenged--Greek, "exacted in retribution." A particular
application of the principle
(Ge 9:5).
blood of his servants--literally shed by the Old Testament
adulterous Church, and by the New Testament apostate Church; also
virtually, though not literally, by all who, though called Christians,
hate their brother, or love not the brethren of Christ, but shrink from
the reproach of the cross, and show unkindness towards those who bear
it.
3. again--Greek, "a second time."
rose up--Greek, "goeth up."
for ever and ever--Greek, "to the ages of the ages."
4. beasts--rather, "living creatures."
sat--Greek, "sitteth."
5. out of--Greek, "out from the throne" in A, B, C.
Praise our God--Compare the solemn act of praise performed by
the Levites,
1Ch 16:36; 23:5,
especially when the house of God was filled with the divine glory
(2Ch 5:13).
both--omitted in A, B, C, Vulgate, Coptic, and
Syriac. Translate as Greek, "the small and
the great."
6. many waters--Contrast the "many waters" on which the whore
sitteth
(Re 17:1).
This verse is the hearty response to the stirring call, "Alleluia!
Praise our God"
(Re 19:4, 5).
the Lord God omnipotent--Greek, "the Omnipotent."
reigneth--literally, "reigned": hence reigneth once for
all. His reign is a fact already established. Babylon, the harlot,
was one great hindrance to His reign being recognized. Her overthrow
now clears the way for His advent to reign; therefore, not merely Rome,
but the whole of Christendom in so far as it is carnal and compromised
Christ for the world, is comprehended in the term "harlot." The beast
hardly arises when he at once "goeth into perdition": so that Christ is
prophetically considered as already reigning, so soon does His advent
follow the judgment on the harlot.
7. glad . . . rejoice--Greek, "rejoice
. . . exult."
give--so B and ANDREAS. But A reads, "we
will give."
glory--Greek, "the glory."
the marriage of the Lamb is come--The full and
final consummation is at
Re 21:2-9,
&c. Previously there must be the overthrow of the beast, &c., at the
Lord's coming, the binding of Satan, the millennial reign, the loosing
of Satan and his last overthrow, and the general judgment. The
elect-Church, the heavenly Bride, soon after the destruction of the
harlot, is transfigured at the Lord's coming, and joins with Him in His
triumph over the beast. On the emblem of the heavenly Bridegroom and
Bride, compare
Mt 22:2; 25:6, 10;
2Co 11:2.
Perfect union with Him personally, and participation in His holiness;
joy, glory, and kingdom, are included in this symbol of "marriage";
compare Song of Solomon everywhere. Besides the heavenly Bride,
the transfigured, translated, and risen Church, reigning over
the earth with Christ, there is also the earthly bride, Israel,
in the flesh, never yet divorced, though for a time separated,
from her divine husband, who shall then be reunited to the Lord, and be
the mother Church of the millennial earth, Christianized through her.
Note, we ought, as Scripture does, restrict the language drawn from
marriage-love to the Bride, the Church as a whole; not
use it as individuals in our relation to Christ, which Rome does in the
case of her nuns. Individually, believers are effectually-called
guests; collectively, they constitute the bride. The harlot
divides her affections among many lovers: the bride gives hers
exclusively to Christ.
8. granted--Though in one sense she "made herself ready,"
having by the Spirit's work in her put on "the wedding garment," yet in
the fullest sense it is not she, but her Lord, who makes her ready by
"granting to her that she be arrayed in fine linen." It is He
who, by giving Himself for her, presents her to Himself a
glorious Church, not having spot, but holy and without blemish. It
is He also who sanctifies her, naturally vile and without beauty,
with the washing of water by the word, and puts His own comeliness
on her, which thus becomes hers.
clean and white--so ANDREAS. But A and B
transpose. Translate, "bright and pure"; at once brilliantly
splendid and spotless as in the bride herself.
righteousness--Greek, "righteousnesses"; distributively
used. Each saint must have this righteousness: not merely be
justified, as if the righteousness belonged to the Church in the
aggregate; the saints together have righteousnesses; namely,
He is accounted as "the Lord our righteousness" to each saint on
his believing, their robes being made white in the blood of the
Lamb. The righteousness of the saint is not, as
ALFORD erroneously states, inherent, but is
imputed: if it were otherwise, Christ would be merely enabling
the sinner to justify himself.
Ro 5:18
is decisive on this. Compare Article XI, Church of England. The
justification already given to the saints in title and unseen
possession, is now GIVEN them in manifestation:
they openly walk with Christ in white. To this, rather than
to their primary justification on earth, the reference is here. Their
justification before the apostate world, which had persecuted them,
contrasts with the judgment and condemnation of the harlot. "Now that
the harlot has fallen, the woman triumphs" [AUBERLEN]. Contrast with the pure fine linen
(indicating the simplicity and purity) of the bride, the tawdry
ornamentation of the harlot. Babylon, the apostate Church, is the
antithesis to new Jerusalem, the transfigured Church of God. The woman
(Re 12:1-6),
the harlot
(Re 17:1-7),
the bride
(Re 19:1-10),
are the three leading aspects of the Church.
9. He--God by His angel saith unto me.
called--effectually, not merely externally. The "unto," or
into," seems to express this: not merely invited to
(Greek, "epi"), but called INTO, so
as to be partakers of (Greek, "eis"); compare
1Co 1:9.
marriage supper--Greek, "the supper of the marriage."
Typified by the Lord's Supper.
true--Greek, "genuine"; veritable sayings which shall
surely be fulfilled, namely, all the previous revelations.
10. at--Greek, "before." John's intending to worship the
angel here, as in
Re 22:8,
on having revealed to him the glory of the new Jerusalem, is the
involuntary impulse of adoring joy at so blessed a prospect. It forms a
marked contrast to the sorrowful wonder with which he had looked
on the Church in her apostasy as the harlot
(Re 17:6).
It exemplifies the corrupt tendencies of our fallen nature that even
John, an apostle, should have all but fallen into "voluntary humility
and worshipping of angels," which Paul warns us against.
and of thy brethren--that is, a fellow servant of thy
brethren.
have the testimony of Jesus--(See on
Re 12:17).
the testimony of--that is, respecting Jesus.
is the spirit of prophecy--is the result of the same spirit of
prophecy in you as in myself. We angels, and you apostles, all alike
have the testimony of (bear testimony concerning) Jesus by the
operation of one and the same Spirit, who enables me to show you these
revelations and enables you to record them: wherefore we are fellow
servants, not I your lord to be worshipped by you. Compare
Re 22:9,
"I am fellow servant of thee and of thy brethren the prophets";
whence the "FOR the testimony," &c., here, may be
explained as giving the reason for his adding "and (fellow servant) of
thy brethren that have the testimony of Jesus." I mean, of the
prophets; "for it is of Jesus that thy brethren, the
prophets, testify by the Spirit in them." A clear condemnation of
Romish invocation of saints as if they were our superiors to be
adored.
11. behold a white horse; and he that sat upon him--identical
with
Re 6:2.
Here as there he comes forth "conquering and to conquer." Compare the
ass-colt on which He rode into Jerusalem
(Mt 21:1-7).
The horse was used for war: and here He is going forth to war
with the beast. The ass is for peace. His riding on it into
Jerusalem is an earnest of His reign in Jerusalem over the earth, as
the Prince of peace, after all hostile powers have been
overthrown. When the security of the world power, and the distress of
the people of God, have reached the highest point, the Lord Jesus shall
appear visibly from heaven to put an end to the whole course of the
world, and establish His kingdom of glory. He comes to judge with
vengeance the world power, and to bring to the Church redemption,
transfiguration, and power over the world. Distinguish between this
coming
(Mt 24:27, 29, 37, 39;
Greek, "parousia") and the end, or final judgment
(Mt 25:31;
1Co 15:23).
Powerful natural phenomena shall accompany His advent
[AUBERLEN].
12. Identifying Him with the Son of man similarly described,
Re 1:14.
many crowns--Greek, "diadems": not merely (Greek,
"stephanoi") garlands of victory, but royal crowns, as
KING OF KINGS. Christ's diadem comprises all the
diadems of the earth and of heavenly powers too. Contrast the papal
tiara composed of three diadems. Compare also the little horn
(Antichrist) that overcomes the three horns or kingdoms,
Da 7:8, 24
(Quære, the Papacy? or some three kingdoms that
succeed the papacy, which itself, as a temporal kingdom, was made up at
first of three kingdoms, the exarchate of Ravenna, the kingdom
of the Lombards, and the state of Rome, obtained by Pope Zachary and
Stephen II from Pepin, the usurper of the French dominion). Also, the
seven crowns (diadems) on the seven heads of the dragon
(Re 12:3),
and ten diadems on the ten heads of the beast. These usurpers
claim the diadems which belong to Christ alone.
he had a name written--B and Syriac insert, "He had
names written, and a name written," &c., meaning that the
names of the dominion which each diadem indicated were
written on them severally. But A, Vulgate,
ORIGEN, and CYPRIAN omits the
words, as English Version.
name . . . that no man knew but . . .
himself--
(Jud 13:18;
1Co 2:9, 11;
1Jo 3:2).
The same is said of the "new name" of believers. In this, as in all
other respects, the disciple is made like his Lord. The Lord's own "new
name" is to be theirs, and to be "in their foreheads"; whence we may
infer that His as yet unknown name also is written on His
forehead; as the high priest had "Holiness to the Lord" inscribed on
the miter on his brow. John saw it as "written," but knew not
its meaning. It is, therefore, a name which in all its glorious
significancy can be only understood when the union of His saints with
Him, and His and their joint triumph and reign, shall be perfectly
manifested at the final consummation.
13. vesture dipped in blood--
Isa 63:2
is alluded to here, and in
Re 19:15,
end. There the blood is not His own, but that of His foes. So
here the blood on His "vesture," reminding us of His own blood
shed for even the ungodly who trample on it, is a premonition of the
shedding of their blood in righteous retribution. He sheds the
blood, not of the godly, as the harlot and beast did, but of the
blood-stained ungodly, including them both.
The Word of God--who made the world, is He also who under the
same character and attributes shall make it anew. His title, Son of
God, is applicable in a lower sense, also to His people; but "the
Word of God" indicates His incommunicable Godhead, joined to His
manhood, which He shall then manifest in glory. "The Bride does not
fear the Bridegroom; her love casteth out fear. She welcomes Him; she
cannot be happy but at His side. The Lamb
[Re 19:9,
the aspect of Christ to His people at His coming] is the symbol of
Christ in His gentleness. Who would be afraid of a lamb? Even a little
child, instead of being scared, desires to caress it. There is nothing
to make us afraid of God but sin, and Jesus is the Lamb of God that
taketh away the sin of the world. What a fearful contrast is the
aspect which He will wear towards His enemies! Not as the Bridegroom
and the Lamb, but as the [avenging] judge and warrior stained in the
blood of His enemies."
14. the armies . . . in heaven--Compare "the horse
bridles,"
Re 14:20.
The glorified saints whom God "will bring with" Christ at His advent;
compare
Re 17:14,
"they that are with Him, called, chosen, faithful"; as also "His mighty
angels."
white and clean--Greek, "pure." A, B, Vulgate,
Syriac, and CYPRIAN omit "and," which
ORIGEN and ANDREAS retain, as
English Version.
15. out of his mouth . . . sword--
(Re 1:16; 2:12, 16).
Here in its avenging power,
2Th 2:8,
"consume with the Spirit of His mouth"
(Isa 11:4,
to which there is allusion here); not in its convicting and converting
efficacy
(Eph 6:17;
Heb 4:12, 13,
where also the judicial keenness of the sword-like word is included).
The Father commits the judgment to the Son.
he shall rule--The HE is emphatic, He and none other, in
contrast to the usurpers who have misruled on earth. "Rule," literally,
"tend as a shepherd"; but here in a punitive sense. He, who would have
shepherded them with pastoral rod and with the golden scepter of
His love, shall dash them in pieces, as refractory rebels, with "a rod
of iron."
treadeth . . . wine-press--
(Isa 63:3).
of the fierceness and wrath--So ANDREAS
reads. But A, B, Vulgate, Coptic, and
ORIGEN read, "of the fierceness (or boiling
indignation) of the wrath," omitting "and."
Almighty--The fierceness of Christ's wrath against His foes will
be executed with the resources of omnipotence.
16. "His name written on His vesture and on His thigh," was
written partly on the vesture, partly on the thigh itself, at the part
where in an equestrian figure the robe drops from the thigh. The
thigh symbolizes Christ's humanity as having come, after the
flesh, from the loins of David, and now appearing as the
glorified "Son of man." On the other hand, His incommunicable divine
name, "which no man knew," is on His head
(Re 19:12),
[MENOCHIUS].
KING OF KINGS--Compare
Re 17:14,
in contrast with
Re 19:17,
the beast being in attempted usurpation a king of kings, the ten
kings delivering their kingdom to him.
17. an--Greek, "one."
in the sun--so as to be conspicuous in sight of the whole world.
to all the fowls--
(Eze 39:17-20).
and gather yourselves--A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS read, "be gathered," omitting "and."
of the great God--A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS read, "the great supper (that is, banquet)
of God."
18. Contrast with this "supper,"
Re 19:17, 18,
the marriage supper of the Lamb,
Re 19:9.
captains--Greek, "captains of thousands," that is,
chief captains. The "kings" are "the ten" who "give their power
unto the beast."
free and bond--specified in
Re 13:16,
as "receiving the mark of the beast." The repetition of flesh
(in the Greek it is plural: masses of flesh) five times
in this verse, marks the gross carnality of the followers of the
beast. Again, the giving of their flesh to the fowls to eat, is a
righteous retribution for their not suffering the dead bodies of
Christ's witnesses to be put in graves.
19. gathered together--at Armageddon, under the sixth vial. For
"their armies" in B and ANDREAS, there is
found "His armies" in A.
war--so ANDREAS. But A and B read,
"the war," namely, that foretold,
Re 16:14; 17:4.
20. and with him the false prophet--A reads, "and those with
him." B reads, "and he who was with him, the false prophet."
miracles--Greek, "the miracles" (literally,
"signs") recorded already
(Re 13:14)
as wrought by the second beast before (literally, 'in sight of')
the first beast. Hence it follows the second beast is
identical with the false prophet. Many expositors represent the
first beast to be the secular, the second beast to be the
ecclesiastical power of Rome; and account for the change of title for
the latter from the "other beast" to the "false prophet," is because by
the judgment on the harlot, the ecclesiastical power will then retain
nothing of its former character save the power to deceive. I think it
not unlikely that the false prophet will be the successor of the
spiritual pretensions of the papacy; while the beast in its last form
as the fully revealed Antichrist will be the secular representative and
embodiment of the fourth world kingdom, Rome, in its last form of
intensified opposition to God. Compare with this prophecy,
Eze 38:1-39:29;
Da 2:34, 35, 44; 11:44, 45; 12:1;
Joe 3:9-17;
Zec 12:1-14:21.
Daniel
(Da 7:8)
makes no mention of the second beast, or false prophet, but mentions
that "the little horn" has "the eyes of a man," that is, cunning and
intellectual culture; this is not a feature of the first beast in the
thirteenth chapter, but is expressed by the Apocalyptic "false
prophet," the embodiment of man's unsanctified knowledge, and the
subtlety of the old serpent. The first beast is a political power; the
second is a spiritual power--the power of ideas. But both are
beasts, the worldly Antichristian wisdom serving the worldly
Antichristian power. The dragon is both lion and serpent. As the first
law in God's moral government is that "judgment should begin at the
house of God," and be executed on the harlot, the faithless Church, by
the world power with which she had committed spiritual adultery, so it
is a second law that the world power, after having served as God's
instrument of punishment, is itself punished. As the harlot is judged
by the beast and the ten kings, so these are destroyed by the Lord
Himself coming in person. So
Zep 1:1-18
compared with
Zep 2:1-15.
And Jeremiah, after denouncing Jerusalem's judgment by Babylon, ends
with denouncing Babylon's own doom. Between the judgment on the harlot
and the Lord's destruction of the beast, will intervene that season in
which earthly-mindedness will reach its culmination, and
Antichristianity triumph for its short three and a half days during
which the two witnesses lie dead. Then shall the Church be ripe for her
glorification, the Antichristian world for destruction. The world at
the highest development of its material and spiritual power is but a
decorated carcass round which the eagles gather. It is characteristic
that Antichrist and his kings, in their blindness, imagine that they
can wage war against the King of heaven with earthly hosts; herein is
shown the extreme folly of Babylonian confusion. The Lord's mere
appearance, without any actual encounter, shows Antichrist his
nothingness; compare the effect of Jesus' appearance even in His
humiliation,
Joh 18:6
[AUBERLEN].
had received--rather as Greek, "received," once for
all.
them; that worshipped--literally, "them worshipping" not an act
once for all done, as the "received" implies, but those
in the habit of "worshipping."
These both were cast . . . into a lake--Greek,
". . . the lake of fire," Gehenna. Satan is subsequently cast
into it, at the close of the outbreak which succeeds the millennium
(Re 20:10).
Then Death and Hell, as well those not found at the general judgment
"written in the book of life"; this constitutes "the second death."
alive--a living death; not mere annihilation. "Their worm dieth
not, their fire is not quenched."
21. the remnant--Greek, "the rest," that is, "the kings
and their armies"
(Re 19:19)
classed together in one indiscriminate mass. A solemn confirmation of
the warning in
Ps 2:10.
CHAPTER 20
Re 20:1-15.
SATAN
BOUND, AND THE
FIRST-RISEN
SAINTS
REIGN WITH
CHRIST, A
THOUSAND
YEARS;
SATAN
LOOSED,
GATHERS THE
NATIONS,
GOG AND
MAGOG,
ROUND THE
CAMP OF THE
SAINTS, AND
IS
FINALLY
CONSIGNED TO THE
LAKE OF
FIRE; THE
GENERAL
RESURRECTION AND
LAST
JUDGMENT.
1. The destruction of his representatives, the beast and the
false prophet, to whom he had given his power, throne, and
authority, is followed by the binding of Satan himself for a
thousand years.
the key of the bottomless pit--now transferred from Satan's
hands, who had heretofore been permitted by God to use it in letting
loose plagues on the earth; he is now to be made to feel himself the
torment which he had inflicted on men, but his full torment is not
until he is cast into "the lake of fire"
(Re 20:10).
2. that old--ancient serpent
(Re 12:9).
thousand years--As seven mystically implies universality,
so a thousand implies perfection, whether in good or evil
[AQUINAS on ch. 11]. Thousand symbolizes
that the world is perfectly leavened and pervaded by the divine; since
thousand is ten, the number of the world, raised to the
third power, three being the number of God
[AUBERLEN]. It may denote literally also a
thousand years.
3. shut him--A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, and
ANDREAS omit "him."
set a seal upon him--Greek, "over him," that is, sealed
up the door of the abyss over his head. A surer seal to keep him from
getting out than his seal over Jesus in the tomb of Joseph, which was
burst on the resurrection morn. Satan's binding at' this juncture is
not arbitrary, but is the necessary consequence of the events
(Re 19:20);
just as Satan's being cast out of heaven, where he had previously been
the accuser of the brethren, was the legitimate judgment which passed
on him through the death, resurrection, and ascension of Christ
(Re 12:7-10).
Satan imagined that he had overcome Christ on Golgotha, and that his
power was secure for ever, but the Lord in death overcame him, and by
His ascension as our righteous Advocate cast out Satan, the accuser
from heaven. Time was given on earth to make the beast and harlot
powerful, and then to concentrate all his power in Antichrist. The
Antichristian kingdom, his last effort, being utterly destroyed by
Christ's mere appearing, his power on earth is at an end. He had
thought to destroy God's people on earth by Antichristian persecutions
(just as he had thought previously to destroy Christ); but the Church
is not destroyed from the earth but is raised to rule over it, and
Satan himself is shut up for a thousand years in the "abyss"
(Greek for "bottomless pit"), the preparatory prison to the
"lake of fire," his final doom. As before he ceased by Christ's
ascension to be an accuser in heaven, so during the millennium he
ceases to be the seducer and the persecutor on earth. As long as the
devil rules in the darkness of the world, we live in an atmosphere
impregnated with deadly elements. A mighty purification of the air will
be effected by Christ's coming. Though sin will not be absolutely
abolished--for men will still be in the flesh
(Isa 65:20)
--sin will no longer be a universal power, for the flesh is not any
longer seduced by Satan. He will not be, as now, "the god and prince of
the world"--nor will the world "lie in the wicked one"--the flesh will
become ever more isolated and be overcome. Christ will reign with His
transfigured saints over men in the flesh [AUBERLEN]. This will be the manifestation of "the world
to come," which has been already set up invisibly in the saints, amidst
"this world"
(2Co 4:4;
Heb 2:5; 5:5).
The Jewish Rabbis thought, as the world was created in six days and on
the seventh God rested, so there would be six millenary periods,
followed by a sabbatical millennium. Out of seven years every seventh
is the year of remission, so out of the seven thousand years of the
world the seventh millenary shall be the millenary of remission. A
tradition in the house of Elias, A.D. 200, states
that the world is to endure six thousand years; two thousand before the
law, two thousand under the law, and two thousand under Messiah.
Compare Note, see on
Heb 4:9
and
Heb 4:9,
Margin; see on
Re 14:13.
PAPIAS, JUSTIN
MARTYR, IRENÆUS, and
CYPRIAN, among the earliest Fathers, all held the
doctrine of a millennial kingdom on earth; not till millennial views
degenerated into gross carnalism was this doctrine abandoned.
that he should deceive--so A. But B reads, "that he deceive"
(Greek, "plana," for "planeesee").
and--so Coptic and ANDREAS. But A,
B, and Vulgate omit "and."
4, 5. they sat--the twelve apostles, and the saints in general.
judgment was given unto there--(See on
Da 7:22).
The office of judging was given to them. Though in one sense having to
stand before the judgment-seat of Christ, yet in another sense they "do
not come into judgment (Greek), but have already passed from
death unto life."
souls--This term is made a plea for denying the literality of
the first resurrection, as if the resurrection were the spiritual one
of the souls of believers in this life; the life and reign being
that of the soul raised in this life from the death of sin by vivifying
faith. But "souls" expresses their disembodied state (compare
Re 6:9)
as John saw them at first; "and they lived" implies their coming to
life in the body again, so as to be visible, as the phrase,
Re 20:5,
"this is the first resurrection," proves; for as surely as "the rest of
the dead lived not (again) until," &c., refers to the bodily
general resurrection, so must the first resurrection refer to
the body. This also accords with
1Co 15:23,
"They that are Christ's at His coming." Compare
Ps 49:11-15.
From
Re 6:9,
I infer that "souls" is here used in the strict sense of spirits
disembodied when first seen by John; though doubtless "souls" is
often used in general for persons, and even for dead
bodies.
beheaded--literally, "smitten with an axe"; a Roman
punishment, though crucifixion, casting to beasts, and burning, were
the more common modes of execution. The guillotine in revolutionary
France was a revival of the mode of capital punishment of pagan
imperial Rome. Paul was beheaded, and no doubt shall share
the first resurrection, in accordance with his prayer that he
"might attain unto the resurrection from out of the rest of the dead"
(Greek, "exanastasis"). The above facts may account for
the specification of this particular kind of punishment.
for . . . for--Greek, "for the sake of"; on
account of"; "because of."
and which--Greek, "and the which." And prominent
among this class (the beheaded), such as did not worship the beast. So
Re 1:7,
Greek, "and the which," or "and such as," particularizes
prominently among the general class those that follow in the
description [TREGELLES]. The extent of the
first resurrection is not spoken of here. In
1Co 15:23, 51;
1Th 4:14
we find that all "in Christ" shall share in it. John himself was not
"beheaded," yet who doubts but that he shall share in the first
resurrection? The martyrs are put first, because most like Jesus in
their sufferings and death, therefore nearest Him in their life and
reign; for Christ indirectly affirms there are relative degrees and
places of honor in His kingdom, the highest being for those who drink
his cup of suffering. Next shall be those who have not bowed to the
world power, but have looked to the things unseen and eternal.
neither--"not yet."
foreheads . . . hands--Greek, "forehead
. . . hand."
reigned with Christ--over the earth.
5. But--B, Coptic, and ANDREAS read,
"and." A and Vulgate omit it.
again--A, B, Vulgate, Coptic, and
ANDREAS omit it. "Lived" is used for lived
again, as in
Re 2:8.
John saw them not only when restored to life, but when in the act of
reviving [BENGEL].
first resurrection--"the resurrection of the just." Earth is not
yet transfigured, and cannot therefore be the meet locality for the
transfigured Church; but from heaven the transfigured saints with
Christ rule the earth, there being a much freer communion of the
heavenly and earthly churches (a type of which state may be seen in the
forty days of the risen Saviour during which He appeared to His
disciples), and they know no higher joy than to lead their brethren on
earth to the same salvation and glory as they share themselves. The
millennial reign on earth does not rest on an isolated passage of the
Apocalypse, but all Old Testament prophecy goes on the same view
(compare
Isa 4:3; 11:9; 35:8).
Jesus, while opposing the carnal views of the kingdom of God prevalent
among the Jews in His day, does not contradict, but confirms, the Old
Testament view of a coming, earthly, Jewish kingdom of glory: beginning
from within, and spreading itself now spiritually, the kingdom of God
shall manifest itself outwardly at Christ's coming again. The papacy is
a false anticipation of the kingdom during the Church-historical
period. "When Christianity became a worldly power under Constantine,
the hope of the future was weakened by the joy over present success"
[BENGEL]. Becoming a harlot, the Church ceased to
be a bride going to meet her Bridegroom; thus millennial hopes
disappeared. The rights which Rome as a harlot usurped, shall be
exercised in holiness by the Bride. They are "kings" because they are
"priests"
(Re 20:6;
Re 1:6; 5:10);
their priesthood unto God and Christ
(Re 7:15)
is the ground of their kingship in relation to man. Men will be willing
subjects of the transfigured priest-kings, in the day of the Lord's
power. Their power is that of attraction, winning the heart, and not
counteracted by devil or beast. Church and State shall then be
co-extensive. Man created "to have dominion over earth" is to rejoice
over his world with unmixed, holy joy. John tells us that,
instead of the devil, the transfigured Church of Christ; Daniel, that
instead of the heathen beast, the holy Israel, shall rule the world
[AUBERLEN].
6. Blessed--(Compare
Re 14:13; 19:9).
on such the second death hath no power--even as it has none on
Christ now that He is risen.
priests of God--Apostate Christendom being destroyed, and the
believing Church translated at Christ's coming, there will remain
Israel and the heathen world, constituting the majority of men then
alive, which, from not having come into close contact with the Gospel,
have not incurred the guilt of rejecting it. These will be the subjects
of a general conversion
(Re 11:15).
"The veil" shall be taken off Israel first, then from off "all people."
The glorious events attending Christ's appearing, the destruction of
Antichrist, the transfiguration of the Church, and the binding of
Satan, will prepare the nations for embracing the Gospel. As
individual regeneration goes on now, so there shall be a
"regeneration" of nations then. Israel, as a nation, shall be
"born at once--in one day." As the Church began at Christ's
ascension, so the kingdom shall begin at His second advent. This
is the humiliation of the modern civilized nations, that nations which
they despise most, Jews and uncivilized barbarians, the negro
descendants of Ham who from the curse of Noah have been so backward,
Cush and Sheba, shall supplant and surpass them as centers of the
world's history (compare
De 32:21;
Ro 10:19; 11:20,
&c.). The Jews are our teachers even in New Testament times. Since
their rejection revelation has been silent. The whole Bible, even the
New Testament, is written by Jews. If revelation is to recommence in
the millennial kingdom, converted Israel must stand at the head of
humanity. In a religious point of view, Jews and Gentiles stand on an
equal footing as both alike needing mercy; but as regards God's
instrumentalities for bringing about His kingdom on earth, Israel is
His chosen people for executing His plans. The Israelite priest-kings
on earth are what the transfigured priest-kings are in heaven. There
shall be a blessed chain of giving and receiving--God, Christ, the
transfigured Bride the Church, Israel, the world of nations. A new time
of revelation will begin by the outpouring of the fulness of the
Spirit. Ezekiel (the fortieth through forty-eighth chapters), himself
son of a priest, sets forth the priestly character of Israel; Daniel
the statesman, its kingly character; Jeremiah
(Jer 33:17-21),
both its priestly and kingly character. In the Old Testament the whole
Jewish national life was religious only in an external legal manner.
The New Testament Church insists on inward renewal, but leaves its
outward manifestations free. But in the millennial kingdom, all spheres
of life shall be truly Christianized from within outwardly. The Mosaic
ceremonial law corresponds to Israel's priestly office; the civil law
to its kingly office: the Gentile Church adopts the moral law, and
exercises the prophetic office by the word working inwardly. But when
the royal and the priestly office shall be revived, then--the
principles of the Epistle to the Hebrews remaining the same--also the
ceremonial and civil law of Moses will develop its spiritual depths in
the divine worship (compare
Mt 5:17-19).
At present is the time of preaching; but then the time of the
Liturgy of converted souls forming "the great congregation"
shall come. Then shall our present defective governments give place to
perfect governments in both Church and State. Whereas under the Old
Testament the Jews exclusively, and in the New Testament the Gentiles
exclusively, enjoy the revelation of salvation (in both cases humanity
being divided and separated), in the millennium both Jews and Gentiles
are united, and the whole organism of mankind under the first-born
brother, Israel, walks in the light of God, and the full life of
humanity is at last realized. Scripture does not view the human race as
an aggregate of individuals and nationalities, but as an organic whole,
laid down once for all in the first pages of revelation.
(Ge 9:25-27; 10:1, 5, 18, 25, 32;
De 32:8
recognizes the fact that from the first the division of the nations was
made with a relation to Israel). Hence arises the importance of the Old
Testament to the Church now as ever. Three grand groups of nations,
Hamites, Japhetites, and Shemites, correspond respectively to the three
fundamental elements in man--body, soul, and spirit. The flower of
Shem, the representative of spiritual life, is Israel, even as
the flower of Israel is He in whom all mankind is summed up, the second
Adam
(Ge 12:1-3).
Thus Israel is the mediator of divine revelations for all times. Even
nature and the animal world will share in the millennial blessedness.
As sin loses its power, decay and death will decrease [AUBERLEN]. Earthly and heavenly glories shall be united
in the twofold election. Elect Israel in the flesh shall stand at the
head of the earthly, the elect spiritual Church, the Bride, in the
heavenly. These twofold elections are not merely for the good of the
elect themselves, but for the good of those to whom they minister. The
heavenly Church is elected not merely to salvation, but to rule in
love, and minister blessings over the whole earth, as king-priests. The
glory of the transfigured saints shall be felt by men in the flesh with
the same consciousness of blessing as on the Mount of Transfiguration
the three disciples experienced in witnessing the glory of Jesus, and
of Moses and Elias, when Peter exclaimed, "It is good for us to be
here"; in
2Pe 1:16-18,
the Transfiguration is regarded as the earnest of Christ's coming in
glory. The privilege of "our high calling in Christ" is limited
to the present time of Satan's reign; when he is bound, there will be
no scope for suffering for, and so afterwards reigning with, Him
(Re 3:21;
compare Note, see on
1Co 6:2).
Moreover, none can be saved in the present age and in the pale of the
Christian Church who does not also reign with Christ hereafter, the
necessary preliminary to which is suffering with Christ now. If we fail
to lay hold of the crown, we lose all, "the gift of grace as
well as the reward of service" [DE BURGH].
7. expired--Greek, "finished."
8. Gog and Magog--
(Eze 38:1-39:29;
see on
Eze 38:2).
Magog is a general name for northern nations of Japheth's posterity,
whose ideal head is Gog
(Ge 10:2).
A has but one Greek article to "Gog and Magog," whereby the two,
namely, the prince and the people, are marked as having the closest
connection. B reads the second article before Magog wrongly. HILLER [Onomasticon] explains both words as
signifying "lofty," "elevated." For "quarters" the Greek is
"corners."
to battle--Greek, "to the war," in A and B. But
ANDREAS omits "the."
9. on the breadth of the earth--so as completely to overspread
it. Perhaps we ought to translate, ". . . of the [holy]
land."
the camp of the saints and the beloved city--the camp of the
saints encircling the beloved city, Jerusalem
(Ecclesiasticus 24:11).
Contrast "hateful" in Babylon
(Re 18:2;
De 32:15,
Septuagint). Ezekiel's prophecy of Gog and Magog
(Eze 38:1-39:29)
refers to the attack made by Antichrist on Israel before the
millennium: but this attack is made after the millennium, so
that "Gog and Magog" are mystical names representing the final
adversaries led by Satan in person. Ezekiel's Gog and Magog come from
the north, but those here come "from the four corners of the
earth." Gog is by some connected with a Hebrew root,
"covered."
from God--so B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. But A omits the words. Even during the
millennium there is a separation between heaven and earth, transfigured
humanity and humanity in the flesh. Hence it is possible that an
apostasy should take place at its close. In the judgment on this
apostasy the world of nature is destroyed and renewed, as the world of
history was before the millennial kingdom; it is only then that the new
heaven and new earth are realized in final perfection. The
millennial new heaven and earth are but a foretaste of this
everlasting state when the upper and lower congregations shall be no
longer separate, though connected as in the millennium, and when new
Jerusalem shall descend from God out of heaven. The inherited
sinfulness of our nature shall be the only influence during the
millennium to prevent the power of the transfigured Church saving all
souls. When this time of grace shall end, no other shall succeed. For
what can move him in whom the visible glory of the Church, while the
influence of evil is restrained, evokes no longing for communion with
the Church's King? As the history of the world of nations ended with
the manifestation of the Church in visible glory, so that of mankind in
general shall end with the great separation of the just from the wicked
(Re 20:12)
[AUBERLEN].
10. that deceived--Greek, "that deceiveth."
lake of fire--his final doom: as "the bottomless pit"
(Re 20:1)
was his temporary prison.
where--so Coptic. But A, B, Vulgate, and
Syriac read, "where also."
the beast and the false prophet are--
(Re 19:20).
day and night--figurative for without intermission
(Re 22:5),
such as now is caused by night interposing between day and day. The
same phrase is used of the external state of the blessed
(Re 4:8).
As the bliss of these is eternal, so the woe of Satan and the lost must
be. As the beast and the false prophet led the former conspiracy
against Christ and His people, so Satan in person heads the last
conspiracy. Satan shall not be permitted to enter this Paradise
regained, to show the perfect security of believers, unlike the first
Adam whom Satan succeeded in robbing of Paradise; and shall, like
Pharaoh at the Rod Sea, receive in this last attempt his final doom.
for ever and ever--Greek, "to the ages of the ages."
11. great--in contrast to the "thrones,"
Re 20:4.
white--the emblem of purity and justice.
him that sat on it--the Father [ALFORD].
Rather, the Son, to whom "the Father hath committed all judgment." God
in Christ, that is, the Father represented by the Son, is He before
whose judgment-seat we must all stand. The Son's mediatorial reign is
with a view to prepare the kingdom for the Father's acceptance. When He
has done that, He shall give it up to the Father, "that God may be all
in all," coming into direct communion with His creatures, without
intervention of a Mediator, for the first time since the fall.
Heretofore Christ's Prophetical mediation had been prominent in
His earthly ministry, His Priestly mediation is prominent now in heaven
between His first and second advents, and His Kingly shall be so during
the millennium and at the general judgment.
earth and heaven fled away--The final conflagration, therefore,
precedes the general judgment. This is followed by the new heaven and
earth
(Re 21:1-27).
12. the dead--"the rest of the dead" who did not share the first
resurrection, and those who died during the millennium.
small and great--B has "the small and the great."
A, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS have "the
great and the small." The wicked who had died from the time of Adam to
Christ's second advent, and all the righteous and wicked who had died
during and after the millennium, shall then have their eternal portion
assigned to them. The godly who were transfigured and reigned with
Christ during it, shall also be present, not indeed to have their
portion assigned as if for the first time (for that shall have been
fixed long before,
Joh 5:24),
but to have it confirmed for ever, and that God's righteousness
may be vindicated in the case of both the saved and the lost, in the
presence of an assembled universe. Compare "We must ALL appear," &c.
Ro 14:10;
2Co 5:10.
The saints having been first pronounced just themselves by Christ out
of "the book of life," shall sit as assessors of the Judge. Compare
Mt 25:31, 32, 40,
"these My brethren." God's omniscience will not allow the most
insignificant to escape unobserved, and His omnipotence will cause the
mightiest to obey the summons. The living are not specially
mentioned: as these all shall probably first (before the destruction of
the ungodly,
Re 20:9)
be transfigured, and caught up with the saints long previously
transfigured; and though present for the confirmation of their
justification by the Judge, shall not then first have their eternal
state assigned to them, but shall sit as assessors with the Judge.
the books . . . opened--
(Da 7:10).
The books of God's remembrance, alike of the evil and the good
(Ps 56:8; 139:4;
Mal 3:16):
conscience
(Ro 2:15, 16),
the word of Christ
(Joh 12:48),
the law
(Ga 3:10),
God's eternal counsel
(Ps 139:16).
book of life--
(Re 3:5;
13:8; 21:27;
Ex 32:32, 33;
Ps 69:28;
Da 12:1;
Php 4:3).
Besides the general book recording the works of all, there is a special
book for believers in which their names are written, not for their
works, but for the work of Christ for, and in, them.
Therefore it is called, "the Lamb's book of life." Electing
grace has singled them out from the general mass.
according to their works--We are justified by faith, but
judged according to (not by) our works. For the general
judgment is primarily designed for the final vindication of God's
righteousness before the whole world, which in this checkered
dispensation of good and evil, though really ruling the world, has been
for the time less manifest. Faith is appreciable by God and the
believer alone
(Re 2:17).
But works are appreciable by all. These, then, are made the
evidential test to decide men's eternal state, thus showing that God's
administration of judgment is altogether righteous.
13. death and hell--Greek, "Hades." The essential
identity of the dying and risen body is hereby shown; for the
sea and grave give up their dead. The body that
sinned or served God shall, in righteous retribution, be the body also
that shall suffer or be rewarded. The "sea" may have a symbolical
[CLUVER from AUGUSTINE],
besides the literal meaning, as, in
Re 8:8; 12:12; 13:1; 18:17, 19;
so "death" and "hell" are personifications (compare
Re 21:1).
But the literal sense need hardly be departed from: all the different
regions wherein the bodies and souls of men had been, gave them up.
14. Death and Hades, as personified representatives of the
enemies of Christ' and His Church, are said to be cast into the lake of
fire to express the truth that Christ and His people shall never more
die, or be in the state of disembodied spirits.
This is the second death--"the lake of fire" is added in A, B,
and ANDREAS. English Version, which omits
the clause, rests on inferior manuscripts. In hell the ancient form of
death, which was one of the enemies destroyed by Christ, shall not
continue, but a death of a far different kind reigns there,
"everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord": an
abiding testimony of the victory of Christ.
15. The blissful lot of the righteous is not here specially
mentioned as their bliss had commenced before the final
judgment. Compare, however,
Mt 25:34, 41, 46.
CHAPTER 21
Re 21:1-27.
THE
NEW
HEAVEN AND
EARTH:
NEW
JERUSALEM
OUT OF
HEAVEN.
The remaining two chapters describe the eternal and consummated kingdom
of God and the saints on the new earth. As the world of nations is to
be pervaded by divine influence in the millennium, so the world of
nature shall be, not annihilated, but transfigured universally in the
eternal state which follows it. The earth was cursed for man's sake;
but is redeemed by the second Adam. Now is the Church; in the
millennium shall be the kingdom; and after that shall be the new world
wherein God shall be all in all. The "day of the Lord" and the
conflagration of the earth are in
2Pe 3:10, 11
spoken of as if connected together, from which many argue against a
millennial interval between His coming and the general conflagration of
the old earth, preparatory to the new; but "day" is used often of a
whole period comprising events intimately connected together, as are
the Lord's second advent, the millennium, and the general conflagration
and judgment. Compare
Ge 2:4
as to the wide use of "day." Man's soul is redeemed by
regeneration through the Holy Spirit now; man's body shall be
redeemed at the resurrection; man's dwelling-place, His
inheritance, the earth, shall be redeemed perfectly at the creation of
the new heaven and earth, which shall exceed in glory the first
Paradise, as much as the second Adam exceeds in glory the first Adam
before the fall, and as man regenerated in body and soul shall exceed
man as he was at creation.
1. the first--that is the former.
passed away--Greek, in A and B is "were departed"
(Greek, "apeelthon," not as in English Version,
"pareelthe").
was--Greek, "is," which graphically sets the thing before
our eyes as present.
no more sea--The sea is the type of perpetual unrest. Hence our
Lord rebukes it as an unruly hostile troubler of His people. It
symbolized the political tumults out of which "the beast" arose,
Re 13:1.
As the physical corresponds to the spiritual and moral world, so the
absence of sea, after the metamorphosis of the earth by
fire, answers to the unruffled state of solid peace which shall
then prevail. The sea, though severing lands from one another,
is now, by God's eliciting of good from evil, made the medium of
communication between countries through navigation. Then man shall
possess inherent powers which shall make the sea no longer necessary,
but an element which would detract from a perfect state. A "river" and
"water" are spoken of in
Re 22:1, 2,
probably literal (that is, with such changes of the natural properties
of water, as correspond analogically to man's own transfigured body),
as well as symbolical. The sea was once the element of the world's
destruction, and is still the source of death to thousands, whence
after the millennium, at the general judgment, it is specially said,
"The sea gave up the dead . . . in it." Then it shall
cease to destroy, or disturb, being removed altogether on account of
its past destructions.
2. And I John--"John" is omitted in A, B, Vulgate, Syriac,
Coptic, and ANDREAS; also the "I" in the
Greek of these authorities is not emphatic. The insertion of "I
John" in the Greek would somewhat interfere with the close
connection which subsists between "the new heaven and earth,"
Re 21:1,
and the "new Jerusalem" in this verse.
Jerusalem . . . out of heaven--
(Re 3:12;
Ga 4:26,
"Jerusalem which is above";
Heb 11:10; 12:22; 13:14).
The descent of the new Jerusalem out of heaven is plainly
distinct from the earthly Jerusalem in which Israel in the flesh
shall dwell during the millennium, and follows on the creation of the
new heaven and earth. John in his Gospel always writes [Greek]
Hierosoluma of the old city; in the Apocalypse always
Hierousaleem of the heavenly city
(Re 3:12).
Hierousaleem is a Hebrew name, the original and holy
appellation. Hierosoluma is the common Greek term, used
in a political sense. Paul observes the same distinction when refuting
Judaism
(Ga 4:26;
compare
Ga 1:17, 18; 2:1;
Heb 12:22),
though not so in the Epistles to Romans and Corinthians
[BENGEL].
bride--made up of the blessed citizens of "the holy city." There
is no longer merely a Paradise as in Eden (though there is that also,
Re 2:7),
no longer a mere garden, but now the city of God on earth,
costlier, statelier, and more glorious, but at the same time the result
of labor and pains such as had not to be expended by man in dressing
the primitive garden of Eden. "The lively stones" were severally in
time laboriously chiselled into shape, after the pattern of "the Chief
corner-stone," to prepare them for the place which they shall
everlastingly fill in the heavenly Jerusalem.
3. out of heaven--so ANDREAS. But A and
Vulgate read, "out of the throne."
the tabernacle--alluding to the tabernacle of God in the
wilderness (wherein many signs of His presence were given): of which
this is the antitype, having previously been in heaven:
Re 11:19; 15:5,
"the temple of the tabernacle of the testimony in heaven"; also
Re 13:6.
Compare the contrast in
Heb 9:23, 14,
between "the patterns" and "the heavenly things themselves," between
"the figures" and "the true." The earnest of the true and heavenly
tabernacle was afforded in the Jerusalem temple described in
Eze 40:1-42:20,
as about to be, namely, during the millennium.
dwell with them--literally, "tabernacle with them"; the
same Greek word as is used of the divine Son
"tabernacling among us." Then He was in the weakness of the
flesh: but at the new creation of heaven and earth He shall
tabernacle among us in the glory of His manifested Godhead
(Re 22:4).
they--in Greek emphatic, "they" (in particular).
his people--Greek, "His peoples": "the nations of
the saved" being all peculiarly His, as Israel was designed to be. So A
reads. But B, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic read, "His
people": singular.
God himself . . . with them--realizing fully His name
Immanuel.
4. all tears--Greek, "every tear."
no more death--Greek, "death shall be no more." Therefore
it is not the millennium, for in the latter there is death
(Isa 65:20;
1Co 15:26, 54,
"the last enemy . . . destroyed is death,"
Re 20:14,
after the millennium).
sorrow--Greek, "mourning."
passed away--Greek, "departed," as in
Re 21:1.
5. sat--Greek, "sitteth."
all things new--not recent, but changed from the old
(Greek, "kaina," not "nea"). An earnest of this
regeneration and transfiguration of nature is given already in the
regenerate soul.
unto me--so Coptic and ANDREAS. But
A, B, Vulgate, and Syriac omit.
true and faithful--so ANDREAS. But A, B,
Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic transpose, "faithful and
true" (literally, "genuine").
6. It is done--the same Greek as in
Re 16:17.
"It is come to pass." So Vulgate reads with English
Version. But A reads, "They ('these words,'
Re 21:5)
are come to pass." All is as sure as if it actually had been fulfilled
for it rests on the word of the unchanging God. When the consummation
shall be, God shall rejoice over the work of His own hands, as at the
completion of the first creation God saw everything that He had
made, and behold it was very good
(Ge 1:31).
Alpha . . . Omega--Greek in A and B,
"the Alpha . . . the Omega"
(Re 1:18).
give unto . . . athirst . . . water of
life--
(Re 22:17;
Isa 12:3; 55:1;
Joh 4:13, 14; 7:37, 38).
This is added lest any should despair of attaining to this exceeding
weight of glory. In our present state we may drink of the stream, then
we shall drink at the Fountain.
freely--Greek, "gratuitously": the same Greek as is
translated, "(They hated Me) without a cause,"
Joh 15:25.
As gratuitous as was man's hatred of God, so gratuitous
is God's love to man: there was every cause in Christ why man should
love Him, yet man hated Him; there was every cause in man why (humanly
speaking) God should have hated man, yet God loved man: the very
reverse of what might be expected took place in both cases. Even in
heaven our drinking at the Fountain shall be God's gratuitous
gift.
7. He that overcometh--another aspect of the believer's life: a
conflict with sin, Satan, and the world is needed. Thirsting for
salvation is the first beginning of, and continues for ever (in the
sense of an appetite and relish for divine joys) a characteristic of
the believer. In a different sense, the believer "shall never thirst."
inherit all things--A, B, Vulgate, and
CYPRIAN read, "these things," namely, the
blessings described in this whole passage. With "all things," compare
1Co 3:21-23.
I will be his God--Greek, "I will be to him a God," that
is, all that is implied of blessing in the name "God."
he shall be my son--"He" is emphatic: He in particular
and in a peculiar sense, above others: Greek, "shall be to
me a son," in fullest realization of the promise made in type to
Solomon, son of David, and antitypically to the divine Son of
David.
8. the fearful--Greek, "the cowardly," who do not quit
themselves like men so as to "overcome" in the good fight; who have
the spirit of slavish "fear," not love, towards God; and who through
fear of man are not bold for God, or "draw back." Compare
Re 21:27; 22:15.
unbelieving--Greek, "faithless."
abominable--who have drank of the harlot's "cup of
abominations."
sorcerers--one of the characteristics of Antichrist's time.
all liars--Greek, "all the liars": or else "all
who are liars"; compare
1Ti 4:1, 2,
where similarly lying and dealings with spirits and
demons, are joined together as features of "the latter times."
second death--
Re 20:14:
"everlasting destruction,"
2Th 1:9;
Mr 9:44, 46, 48,
"Where THEIR worm dieth not, and the fire is not
quenched."
9. The same angel who had shown John Babylon the harlot,
is appropriately employed to show him in contrast new Jerusalem, the
Bride
(Re 17:1-5).
The angel so employed is the one that had the last seven plagues, to
show that the ultimate blessedness of the Church is one end of the
divine judgments on her foes.
unto me--A, B, and Vulgate omit.
the Lamb's wife--in contrast to her who sat on many
waters
(Re 17:1),
(that is, intrigued with many peoples and nations of the world, instead
of giving her undivided affections, as the Bride does, to the Lamb.
10. The words correspond to
Re 17:3,
to heighten the contrast of the bride and harlot.
mountain--Compare
Eze 40:2,
where a similar vision is given from a high mountain.
that great--omitted in A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
CYPRIAN. Translate then, "the holy city
Jerusalem."
descending--Even in the millennium the earth will not be a
suitable abode for transfigured saints, who therefore shall then reign
in heaven over the earth. But after the renewal of the earth at the
close of the millennium and judgment, they shall descend from
heaven to dwell on an earth assimilated to heaven itself. "From God"
implies that "we (the city) are God's workmanship."
11. Having the glory of God--not merely the Shekinah-cloud, but
God Himself as her glory dwelling in the midst of her. Compare the
type, the earthly Jerusalem in the millennium
(Zec 2:5;
compare
Re 21:23,
below).
her light--Greek, "light-giver": properly applied to the
heavenly luminaries which diffuse light. Compare Note,
see on
Php 2:15,
the only other passage where it occurs. The "and" before "her light' is
omitted in A, B, and Vulgate.
even like--Greek, "as it were."
jasper--representing watery crystalline brightness.
12. And--A and B omit.
Eze 48:30-35,
has a similar description, which implies that the millennial Jerusalem
shall have its exact antitype in the heavenly Jerusalem which shall
descend on the finally regenerated earth.
wall great and high--setting forth the security of the Church.
Also, the exclusion of the ungodly.
twelve angels--guards of the twelve gates: an additional emblem
of perfect security, while the gates being never shut
(Re 21:25)
imply perfect liberty and peace. Also, angels shall be the brethren of
the heavenly citizens.
names of . . . twelve tribes--The inscription of the
names on the gates implies that none but the spiritual Israel, God's
elect, shall enter the heavenly city. As the millennium wherein
literal Israel in the flesh shall be the mother Church,
is the antitype to the Old Testament earthly theocracy in the
Holy Land, so the heavenly new Jerusalem is the
consummation antitypical to the spiritual Israel, the elect
Church of Jews and Gentiles being now gathered out: as the spiritual
Israel now is an advance upon the previous literal and carnal Israel,
so the heavenly Jerusalem shall be much in advance of the millennial
Jerusalem.
13. On the north . . . on the south--A, B, Vulgate,
Syriac, and Coptic read, "And on the north and
on the south." In Ezekiel, Joseph, Benjamin, Dan (for which
Manasseh is substituted in
Re 7:6),
are on the east
(Eze 48:32);
Reuben, Judah, Levi, are on the north
(Eze 48:31);
Simeon, Issachar, Zebulun, on the south
(Eze 48:33);
Gad, Asher, Naphtali, on the west
(Eze 48:34).
In Numbers, Judah, Issachar, Zebulun are on the east
(Nu 2:3, 5, 7).
Reuben, Simeon, Gad, on the south
(Nu 2:10, 12, 14).
Ephraim, Manasseh, Benjamin, on the west
(Nu 2:18, 20, 22).
Dan, Asher, Naphtali, on the north
(Nu 2:25, 27, 29).
14. twelve foundations--Joshua, the type of Jesus, chose twelve
men out of the people, to carry twelve stones over the Jordan with
them, as Jesus chose twelve apostles to be the twelve foundations of
the heavenly city, of which He is Himself the Chief corner-stone. Peter
is not the only apostolic rock on whose preaching Christ builds His
Church. Christ Himself is the true foundation: the twelve are
foundations only in regard to their apostolic testimony concerning Him.
Though Paul was an apostle besides the twelve, yet the mystical number
is retained, twelve representing the Church, namely thirty the divine
number, multiplied by four, the world number.
in them the names, &c.--As architects often have their names
inscribed on their great works, so the names of the apostles shall be
held in everlasting remembrance. Vulgate reads, "in
them." But A, B, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS read, "upon them." These
authorities also insert "twelve" before "names."
15. had a golden reed--so Coptic. But A, B,
Vulgate, and Syriac read, "had (as) a measure, a
golden reed." In
Re 11:2
the non-measuring of the outer courts of the temple implied its being
given up to secular and heathen desecration. So here, on the contrary,
the city being measured implies the entire consecration of every part,
all things being brought up to the most exact standard of God's holy
requirements, and also God's accurate guardianship henceforth of even
the most minute parts of His holy city from all evil.
16. twelve thousand furlongs--literally, "to twelve thousand
stadii": one thousand furlongs being the space between the several
twelve gates. BENGEL makes the length of each
side of the city to be twelve thousand stadii. The stupendous
height, length, and breadth being exactly alike, imply its faultless
symmetry, transcending in glory all our most glowing conceptions.
17. hundred . . . forty . . . four
cubits--twelve times twelve: the Church-number squared. The wall is
far beneath the height of the city.
measure of a man, that is, of the angel--The ordinary measure
used by men is the measure here used by the angel,
distinct from "the measure of the sanctuary." Men shall then be
equal to the angels.
18. the building--"the structure"
[TREGELLES], Greek, "endomeesis."
gold, like . . . clear glass--Ideal gold, transparent
as no gold here is [ALFORD]. Excellencies will be
combined in the heavenly city which now seem incompatible.
19. And--so Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. But A, B, and Vulgate omit.
Compare
Re 21:14
with this verse; also
Isa 54:11.
all manner of precious stones--Contrast
Re 18:12
as to the harlot, Babylon. These precious stones constituted the
"foundations."
chalcedony--agate from Chalcedon: semi-opaque, sky-blue, with
stripes of other colors [ALFORD].
20. sardonyx--a gem having the redness of the cornelian, and the
whiteness of the onyx.
sardius--(See on
Re 4:3).
chrysolite--described by PLINY as
transparent and of a golden brightness, like our topaz: different from
our pale green crystallized chrysolite.
beryl--of a sea-green color.
topaz--PLINY [37.32], makes it green
and transparent, like our chrysolite.
chrysoprasus--somewhat pale, and having the purple color of the
amethyst [PLINY, 37, 20, 21].
jacinth--The flashing violet brightness in the amethyst is
diluted in the jacinth [PLINY, 37.41].
21. every several--Greek, "each one severally."
22. no temple . . . God . . . the temple--As
God now dwells in the spiritual Church, His "temple" (Greek,
"naos," "shrine";
1Co 3:17; 6:19),
so the Church when perfected shall dwell in Him as her "temple"
(naos: the same Greek). As the Church was "His
sanctuary," so He is to be their sanctuary. Means of grace shall cease
when the end of grace is come. Church ordinances shall give place to
the God of ordinances. Uninterrupted, immediate, direct, communion with
Him and the Lamb (compare
Joh 4:23),
shall supersede intervening ordinances.
23. in it--so Vulgate. But A, B, and
ANDREAS read, "(shine) on it," or
literally, "for her."
the light--Greek, "the lamp"
(Isa 60:19, 20).
The direct light of God and the Lamb shall make the saints independent
of God's creatures, the sun and moon, for light.
24. of them which are saved . . . in--A, B,
Vulgate, Coptic, and ANDREAS read "(the
nations shall walk) by means of her light": omitting "of them
which are saved." Her brightness shall supply them with light.
the kings of the earth--who once had regard only to their glory,
having been converted, now in the new Jerusalem do bring their glory
into it, to lay it down at the feet of their God and Lord.
and honour--so B, Vulgate, and Syriac. But A omits
the clause.
25. not be shut . . . by day--therefore shall never be
shut: for it shall always be day. Gates are usually shut by
night: but in it shall be no night. There shall be continual free
ingress into it, so as that all which is blessed and glorious may
continually be brought into it. So in the millennial type.
26. All that was truly glorious and excellent in the earth and
its converted nations shall be gathered into it; and while all
shall form one Bride, there shall be various orders among the
redeemed, analogous to the divisions of nations on earth
constituting the one great human family, and to the various orders of
angels.
27. anything that defileth--Greek, "koinoun." A
and B read [koinon,] "anything unclean."
in the Lamb's book of life--(See on
Re 20:12;
Re 20:15).
As all the filth of the old Jerusalem was carried outside the walls and
burnt there, so nothing defiled shall enter the heavenly city, but be
burnt outside (compare
Re 22:15).
It is striking that the apostle of love, who shows us the glories of the
heavenly city, is he also who speaks most plainly of the terrors of
hell. On
Re 21:26, 27,
ALFORD writes a Note, rash in speculation, about
the heathen nations, above what is written, and not at all
required by the sacred text: compare Note, see on
Re 21:26.
CHAPTER 22
Re 22:1-21.
THE
RIVER OF
LIFE:
THE
TREE OF
LIFE:
THE
OTHER
BLESSEDNESSES OF THE
REDEEMED.
JOHN
FORBIDDEN TO
WORSHIP THE
ANGEL.
NEARNESS OF
CHRIST'S
COMING TO
FIX
MAN'S
ETERNAL
STATE.
TESTIMONY OF
JESUS,
HIS
SPIRIT, AND THE
BRIDE,
ANY
ADDITION TO
WHICH, OR
SUBTRACTION FROM
WHICH,
SHALL
BE
ETERNALLY
PUNISHED.
CLOSING
BENEDICTION.
1. pure--A, B, Vulgate, and HILARY
22, omit.
water of life--infinitely superior to the typical waters in the
first Paradise
(Ge 2:10-14);
and even superior to those figurative ones in the millennial Jerusalem
(Eze 47:1, 12;
Zec 14:8),
as the matured fruit is superior to the flower. The millennial waters
represent full Gospel grace; these waters of new Jerusalem represent
Gospel glory perfected. Their continuous flow from God, the Fountain of
life, symbolizes the uninterrupted continuance of life derived by the
saints, ever fresh, from Him: life in fulness of joy, as well as
perpetual vitality. Like pure crystal, it is free from every taint:
compare
Re 4:6,
"before the throne a sea of glass, like crystal."
clear--Greek, "bright."
2. The harmonious unity of Scripture is herein exhibited. The
Fathers compared it to a ring, an unbroken circle, returning into
itself. Between the events of Genesis and those at the close of the
Apocalypse, at least six thousand or seven thousand years intervene;
and between Moses the first writer and John the last about one thousand
five hundred years. How striking it is that, as in the beginning we
found Adam and Eve, his bride, in innocence m Paradise, then tempted by
the serpent, and driven from the tree of life, and from the pleasant
waters of Eden, yet not without a promise of a Redeemer who should
crush the serpent; so at the close, the old serpent cast out for ever
by the second Adam, the Lord from heaven, who appears with His Bride,
the Church, in a better Paradise, and amidst better waters
(Re 22:1):
the tree of life also is there with all its healing properties,
not guarded with a flaming sword, but open to all who overcome
(Re 2:7),
and there is no more curse.
street of it--that is, of the city.
on either side of the river--ALFORD
translates, "In the midst of the street of it (the city) and of the
river, on one side and on the other" (for the second Greek,
"enteuthen," A, B, and Syriac read, ekeithen: the
sense is the same; compare Greek,
Joh 19:18);
thus the trees were on each side in the middle of the space between the
street and the river. But from
Eze 47:7,
I prefer English Version. The antitype exceeds the type: in the
first Paradise was only one tree of life; now there are "very
many trees at the bank of the river, on the one side and on the
other." To make good sense, supposing there to be but one
tree, we should either, as MEDE, suppose that the
Greek for street is a plain washed on both sides
by the river (as the first Paradise was washed on one side by the
Tigris, on the other by the Euphrates), and that in the midst of the
plain, which itself is in the midst of the river's branches, stood the
tree: in which case we may translate, "In the midst of the street
(plain) itself, and of the river (having two branches flowing)
on this and on that side, was there the tree of life." Or else with
DURHAM suppose, the tree was in the midst
of the river, and extending its branches to both banks. But compare
Eze 47:12,
the millennial type of the final Paradise; which shows that there are
several trees of the one kind, all termed "the tree of life." Death
reigns now because of sin; even in the millennial earth sin, and
therefore death, though much limited, shall not altogether cease. But
in the final and heavenly city on earth, sin and death shall utterly
cease.
yielded her fruit every month--Greek, "according to each
month"; each month had its own proper fruit, just as different seasons
are now marked by their own productions; only that then, unlike now,
there shall be no season without its fruit, and there shall be
an endless variety, answering to twelve, the number symbolical
of the world-wide Church (compare Note, see on
Re 12:1;
Re 21:14).
ARCHBISHOP WHATLEY thinks
that the tree of life was among the trees of which Adam freely
ate
(Ge 2:9, 16, 17),
and that his continuance in immortality was dependent on his
continuing to eat of this tree; having forfeited it, he became
liable to death; but still the effects of having eaten of it for a time
showed themselves in the longevity of the patriarchs. God could
undoubtedly endue a tree with special medicinal powers. But
Ge 3:22
seems to imply, man had not yet taken of the tree, and that if
he had, he would have lived for ever, which in his then fallen state
would have been the greatest curse.
leaves . . . for . . . healing--
(Eze 47:9, 12).
The leaves shall be the health-giving preventive securing
the redeemed against, not healing them of, sicknesses, while "the fruit
shall be for meat." In the millennium described in
Eze 47:1-23
and Re 20:1-15,
the Church shall give the Gospel-tree to the nations outside Israel and
the Church, and so shall heal their spiritual malady; but in the
final and perfect new Jerusalem here described, the state
of all is eternally fixed, and no saving process goes on any longer
(compare
Re 22:11).
ALFORD utterly mistakes in speaking of "nations
outside," and "dwelling on the renewed earth, organized under kings,
and saved by the influences of the heavenly city" (!) Compare
Re 21:2, 10-27;
the "nations" mentioned
(Re 21:24)
are those which have long before, namely, in the millennium
(Re 11:15),
become the Lord's and His Christ's.
3. no more curse--of which the earnest shall be given in the
millennium
(Zec 14:11).
God can only dwell where the curse and its cause, the cursed thing sin
(Jos 7:12),
are removed. So there follows rightly, "But the throne of God and of
the Lamb (who redeemed us from the curse,
Ga 3:10, 13)
shall be in it." Compare in the millennium,
Eze 48:35.
serve him--with worship
(Re 7:15).
4. see his face--revealed in divine glory, in Christ
Jesus. They shall see and know Him with intuitive knowledge of Him,
even as they are known by Him
(1Co 13:9-12),
and face to face. Compare
1Ti 6:16,
with Joh 14:9.
God the Father can only be seen in Christ.
in--Greek, "on their foreheads." Not only shall
they personally and in secret
(Re 3:17)
know their sonship, but they shall be known as sons of God to all the
citizens of the new Jerusalem, so that the free flow of mutual love
among the members of Christ's family will not be checked by suspicion
as here.
5. there--so ANDREAS. But A, B,
Vulgate, and Syriac read, "(there shall be no night) any
longer"; Greek, "eti," for "ekei."
they need--A, Vulgate, and Coptic read the future,
"they shall not have need." B reads, "(and there shall be) no
need."
candle--Greek, "lamp." A, Vulgate, Syriac, and
Coptic insert "light (of a candle, or lamp)." B
Omits it.
of the sun--so A. But B omits it.
giveth . . . light--"illumines." So Vulgate and
Syriac. But A reads, "shall give light."
them--so B and ANDREAS. But A reads,
"upon them."
reign--with a glory probably transcending that of their reign in
heaven with Christ over the millennial nations in the flesh described
in
Re 20:4, 6;
that reign was but for a limited time, "a thousand years"; this final
reign is "unto the ages of the ages."
6. These sayings are true--thrice repeated
(Re 19:9; 21:5).
For we are slow to believe that God is as good as He is. The news seems
to us, habituated as we are to the misery of this fallen world, too
good to be true [NANGLE]. They are no dreams of a
visionary, but the realities of God's sure word.
holy--so ANDREAS. But A, B, Vulgate,
Syriac, and Coptic read, "(the Lord God of the)
spirits (of the prophets)." The Lord God who with His Spirit
inspired their spirits so as to be able to prophesy. There is but one
Spirit, but individual prophets, according to the measure given them
(1Co 12:4-11),
had their own spirits [BENGEL]
(1Pe 1:11;
2Pe 1:21).
be done--Greek, "come to pass."
7. "And" is omitted in Coptic and
ANDREAS with English Version, but is
inserted by A, B, Vulgate and Syriac.
blessed--
(Re 1:3).
8. Both here and in
Re 19:9, 10,
the apostle's falling at the feet of the angel is preceded by a
glorious promise to the Church, accompanied with the assurance, that
"These are the true sayings of God," and that those are "blessed" who
keep them. Rapturous emotion, gratitude, and adoration, at the prospect
of the Church's future glory transport him out of himself, so as all
but to fall into an unjustifiable act; contrast his opposite feeling at
the prospect of the Church's deep fall [AUBERLEN],
see on
Re 17:6;
Re 19:9, 10.
saw . . . and heard--A, B, Vulgate, and
Syriac transpose these verbs. Translate literally, "I John (was
he) who heard and saw these things." It is observable that in
Re 19:10,
the language is, "I fell before his feet to worship him"; but here, "I
fell down to worship (God?) before the feet of the angel." It
seems unlikely that John, when once reproved, would fall into the very
same error again. BENGEL'S view, therefore, is
probable; John had first intended to worship the angel
(Re 19:10),
but now only at his feet intends to worship (God). The angel
does not even permit this.
9. Literally, "See not"; the abruptness of the phrase marking
the angel's abhorrence of the thought of his being worshipped
however indirectly. Contrast the fallen angel's temptation to Jesus,
"Fall down and worship me"
(Mt 4:9).
for--A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic,
ANDREAS, and CYPRIAN omit
"for"; which accords with the abrupt earnestness of the angel's
prohibition of an act derogatory to God.
and of--"and (the fellow servant) of thy brethren."
10. Seal not--But in
Da 12:4, 9
(compare
Da 8:26),
the command is, "Seal the book," for the vision shall be "for many
days." The fulfilment of Daniel's prophecy was distant, that of John's
prophecy is near. The New Testament is the time of the end and
fulfilment. The Gentile Church, for which John wrote his Revelation,
needs more to be impressed with the shortness of the period, as it is
inclined, owing to its Gentile origin, to conform to the world and
forget the coming of the Lord. The Revelation points, on the one hand,
to Christ's coming as distant, for it shows the succession of the seven
seals, trumpets, and vials; on the other hand, it proclaims, "Behold, I
come quickly." So Christ marked many events as about to intervene
before His coming, and yet He also says "Behold, I come quickly,"
because our right attitude is that of continual prayerful watching for
His coming
(Mt 25:6, 13, 19;
Mr 13:32-37
[AUBERLEN]; compare
Re 1:3).
11. unjust--"unrighteous"; in relation to one's fellow men;
opposed to "righteous," or "just" (as the Greek may be
translated) below. More literally, "he that doeth unjustly, let
him do unjustly still."
filthy--in relation to one's own soul as unclean before God;
opposed to holy," consecrated to God as pure. A omits the clause, "He
which is filthy let him be filthy still." But B supports it. In the
letter of the Vienne and Lyons Martyrs (in
EUSEBIUS) in the second century, the reading is,
"He that is lawless (Greek, 'anomos') let him be
lawless; and he that is righteous let him be righteous (literally, 'be
justified') still." No manuscript is so old. A, B, Vulgate, Syriac,
Coptic, ANDREAS, and
CYPRIAN read, "let him do righteousness"
(1Jo 2:29; 3:7).
The punishment of sin is sin, the reward of holiness is holiness.
Eternal punishment is not so much an arbitrary law, as a result
necessarily following in the very nature of things, as the fruit
results from the bud. No worse punishment can God lay on ungodly men
than to give them up to themselves. The solemn lesson derivable from
this verse is, Be converted now in the short time left
(Re 22:10,
end) before "I come"
(Re 22:7, 12),
or else you must remain unconverted for ever; sin in the eternal world
will be left to its own natural consequences; holiness in germ will
there develop itself into perfect holiness, which is happiness.
12. And--in none of our manuscripts. But A, B, Vulgate,
Syriac, Coptic, and CYPRIAN omit it.
behold, I come quickly--(Compare
Re 22:7).
my reward is with me--
(Isa 40:10; 62:11).
to give--Greek, "to render."
every man--Greek, "to each."
shall be--so B in MAI. But B in
TISCHENDORF, and A, Syriac, read, "is."
13. I am Alpha--Greek, ". . . the Alpha
and the Omega." A, B, Vulgate, Syriac,
ORIGEN, and CYPRIAN transpose
thus, "the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End."
ANDREAS supports English Version. Compare
with these divine titles assumed here by the Lord Jesus,
Re 1:8, 17; 21:6.
At the winding up of the whole scheme of revelation He announces
Himself as the One before whom and after whom there is no
God.
14. do his commandments--so B, Syriac, Coptic, and
CYPRIAN. But A, Aleph, and Vulgate
read, "(Blessed are they that) wash their robes," namely, in
the blood of the Lamb (compare
Re 7:14).
This reading takes away the pretext for the notion of salvation by
works. But even English Version reading is quite compatible with
salvation by grace; for God's first and grand Gospel "commandment" is
to believe on Jesus. Thus our "right" to (Greek, "privilege" or
"lawful authority over") the tree of life is due not to our doings, but
to what He has done for us. The right, or privilege, is
founded, not on our merits, but on God's grace.
through--Greek, "by the gates."
15. But--so Coptic. But A, B,
HIPPOLYTUS, ANDREAS, and
CYPRIAN omit.
dogs--Greek, "the dogs"; the impure, filthy
(Re 22:11;
compare
Php 3:2).
maketh--including also "whosoever practiceth a lie"
[W. KELLY].
16. mine angel--for Jesus is Lord of the angels.
unto you--ministers and people in the seven representative
churches, and, through you, to testify to Christians of all times and
places.
root . . . offspring of David--appropriate title here
where assuring His Church of "the sure mercies of David," secured to
Israel first, and through Israel to the Gentiles. Root of David,
as being Jehovah; the offspring of David as man. David's Lord, yet
David's son
(Mt 22:42-45).
the morning star--that ushered in the day of grace in the
beginning of this dispensation and that shall usher in the everlasting
day of glory at its close.
17. Reply of the spiritual Church and John to Christ's words
(Re 22:7, 12, 16).
the Spirit--in the churches and in the prophets.
the bride--not here called "wife," as that title applies to her
only when the full number constituting the Church shall have been
completed. The invitation, "Come," only holds good while the Church is
still but an affianced Bride, and not the actually wedded
wife. However, "Come" may rather be the prayer of the Spirit in
the Church and in believers in reply to Christ's "I come quickly,"
crying, Even so, "Come"
(Re 22:7, 12);
Re 22:20
confirms this view. The whole question of your salvation hinges on
this, that you be able to hear with joy Christ's announcement, "I
come," and to reply, "Come" [BENGEL]. Come to
fully glorify Thy Bride.
let him that heareth--that is, let him that heareth the Spirit
and Bride saying to the Lord Jesus, "Come," join the Bride as a true
believer, become part of her, and so say with her to Jesus, "Come." On
"heareth" means "obeyeth"; for until one has obeyed the Gospel
call, he cannot pray to Jesus "Come"; so "hear" is used,
Re 1:3;
Joh 10:16.
Let him that hears and obeys Jesus' voice
(Re 22:16;
Re 1:3)
join in praying "Come." Compare
Re 6:1, 10;
see on
Re 6:1.
In the other view, which makes "Come" an invitation to sinners, this
clause urges those who themselves hear savingly the invitation to
address the same to others, as did Andrew and Philip after they
themselves had heard and obeyed Jesus' invitation, "Come."
let him that is athirst come--As the Bride, the Church, prays to
Jesus, "Come," so she urges all whosoever thirst for
participation in the full manifestation of redemption-glory at His
coming to us, to COME in the meantime and
drink of the living waters, which are the earnest of "the water of life
pure as crystal . . . out of the throne of God of the Lamb"
(Re 22:1)
in the regenerated heaven and earth.
And--so Syriac. But A, B, Vulgate, and
Coptic omit "and."
whosoever will--that is, is willing and desirous. There is a
descending climax; Let him that heareth effectually and savingly
Christ's voice, pray individually, as the Bride, the Church, does
collectively, "Come, Lord Jesus"
(Re 22:20).
Let him who, though not yet having actually heard unto
salvation, and so not yet able to join in the prayer, "Lord Jesus,
come, "still thirsts for it, come to Christ. Whosoever is
even willing, though his desires do not yet amount to positive
thirsting, let him take the water of life freely, that is,
gratuitously.
18. For I testify--None of our manuscripts have this. A, B,
Vulgate, and ANDREAS read, "I" emphatic in
the Greek. "I testify."
unto these things--A, B, and ANDREAS read,
"unto them."
add . . . add--just retribution in kind.
19. book--None of our manuscripts read this. A, B, Aleph,
Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic read, "(take away his part,
that is, portion) from the tree of life," that is, shall deprive
him of participation in the tree of life.
and from the things--so Vulgate. But A, B, Aleph,
Syriac, Coptic, and ANDREAS omit "and";
then "which are written in this book" will refer to "the holy city and
the tree of life." As in the beginning of this book
(Re 1:3)
a blessing was promised to the devout, obedient student of it, so now
at its close a curse is denounced against those who add to, or take
from, it.
20. Amen. Even so, come--The Song of Solomon
(So 8:14)
closes with the same yearning prayer for Christ's coming. A, B, and
Aleph omit "Even so," Greek, "nai": then translate
for Amen, "So be it, come, Lord Jesus"; joining the
"Amen," or "So be it," not with Christ's saying (for He calls Himself
the "Amen" at the beginning of sentences, rather than puts it as a
confirmation at the end), but with John's reply. Christ's "I come," and
John's "Come," are almost coincident in time; so truly does the
believer reflect the mind of his Lord.
21. our--so Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic. But A, B,
and Aleph omit.
Christ--so B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. But A and Aleph omit.
with you all--so none of our manuscripts. B has, "with all the
saints." A and Vulgate have, "with all." Aleph has, "with
the saints." This closing benediction, Paul's mark in his Epistles, was
after Paul's death taken up by John. The Old Testament ended with a
"curse" in connection with the law; the New Testament ends with
a blessing in union with the Lord Jesus.
Amen--so B, Aleph, and ANDREAS. A
and Vulgate Fuldensis omit it.
May the Blessed Lord who has caused all holy Scriptures to be written
for our learning, bless this humble effort to make Scripture expound
itself, and make it an instrument towards the conversion of sinners and
the edification of saints, to the glory of His great name and the
hastening of His kingdom! Amen.
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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