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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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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
1:3.
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 1:25; 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 1:13).
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!"
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