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