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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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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
CĘSAREA, 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 1:9. 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.
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