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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER
16
@Re
16:1-21. THE
SEVEN VIALS
AND THE CONSEQUENT
PLAGUES.
The trumpets shook the world
kingdoms in a longer process; the vials destroy with a
swift and sudden overthrow the kingdom of "the beast" in
particular who had invested himself with the world
kingdom. The Hebrews thought the Egyptian plagues to have
been inflicted with but an interval of a month between
them severally [BENGEL,
referring to SEDER
OLAM]. As
Moses took ashes from an earthly common furnace, so
angels, as priestly ministers in the heavenly temple, take
holy fire in sacred vials or bowls, from the heavenly
altar to pour down (compare @Re
8:5). The same heavenly altar which would have kindled
the sweet incense of prayer bringing down blessing upon
earth, by man's sin kindles the fiery descending curse.
Just as the river Nile, which ordinarily is the source of
Egypt's fertility, became blood and a curse through
Egypt's sin.
1. a great voice--namely,
God's. These seven vials (the detailed expansion of the
vintage, @Re
14:18-20) being called "the last," must belong to the
period just when the term of the beast's power has expired
(whence reference is made in them all to the worshippers
of the beast as the objects of the judgments), close to
the end or coming of the Son of man. The first four are
distinguished from the last three, just as in the case of
the seven seals and the seven trumpets. The first four are
more general, affecting the earth, the sea, springs, and
the sun, not merely a portion of these natural bodies, as
in the case of the trumpets, but the whole of them; the
last three are more particular, affecting the throne of
the beast, the Euphrates, and the grand consummation. Some
of these particular judgments are set forth in detail in
the seventeenth through twentieth chapters.
out of the temple--B and Syriac omit.
But A, C, Vulgate, and ANDREAS
support the words.
the vials--so Syriac and Coptic.
But A, B, C, Vulgate, and ANDREAS
read, "the seven vials."
upon--Greek, "into."
2. went--Greek,
"went away."
poured out--So the angel cast fire into the
earth previous to the series of trumpets (@Re
8:5).
upon--so Coptic. But A, B, C,
Vulgate, and Syriac read, "into."
noisome--literally, "evil" (compare @De
28:27,35). The very same Greek word is used in
the Septuagint as here, Greek, "helkos."
The reason why the sixth Egyptian plague is the first
here is because it was directed against the Egyptian
magicians, Jannes and Jambres, so that they could not
stand before Moses; and so here the plague is sent upon
those who in the beast worship had practiced sorcery. As
they submitted to the mark of the beast, so they must bear
the mark of the avenging God. Contrast @Re
7:3 Eze 9:4,6.
grievous--distressing to the sufferers.
sore upon the men--antitype to the sixth
Egyptian plague.
which had the mark of the beast--Therefore
this first vial is subsequent to the period of the beast's
rule.
3. angel--So B and ANDREAS.
But A, C, and Vulgate omit it.
upon--Greek, "into."
became as . . . blood--answering to another
Egyptian plague.
of a dead man--putrefying.
living soul--So B and ANDREAS.
But A, C, and Syriac, "soul of life" (compare @Ge
1:30 7:21,22).
in the sea--So B and ANDREAS.
But A, C, and Syriac read, "(as respects) the
things in the sea."
4. (@Ex
7:20.)
angel--so Syriac, Coptic, and ANDREAS.
But A, B, C, and Vulgate omit it.
5. angel of the waters--that
is, presiding over the waters.
O Lord--omitted by A, B, C, Vulgate,
Syriac, Coptic, and ANDREAS.
and shalt be--A, B, C, Vulgate, and ANDREAS
for this clause read, "(which art and wast) holy."
The Lord is now no longer He that shall come, for
He is come in vengeance and therefore the third of
the three clauses found in @Re
1:4,8 4:8 is here and in @Re
11:17 omitted.
judged thus--literally, "these things." "Thou
didst inflict this judgment."
6. (@Re
11:18, end; @Ge
9:6 Isa 49:26.) An anticipation of @Re
18:20,24; compare @Re
13:15.
For--A, B, C, and ANDREAS
omit.
7. another out of--omitted
in A, C, Syriac, and Coptic. Translate then,
"I heard the altar [personified] saying." On it the
prayers of saints are presented before God: beneath it are
the souls of the martyrs crying for vengeance on the foes
of God.
8. angel--so Coptic
and ANDREAS.
But A, B, C, Vulgate, and Syriac omit it.
upon--not as in @Re
16:2,3, "into."
sun--Whereas by the fourth trumpet the sun is
darkened (@Re
8:12) in a third part, here by the fourth vial the
sun's bright scorching power is intensified.
power was given unto him--rather, "unto
it," the sun.
men--Greek, "the men," namely, those
who had the mark of the beast (@Re
16:2).
9. men--Greek, "the
men."
repented not to give him glory--(@Re
9:20). Affliction, if it does not melt, hardens the
sinner. Compare the better result on others, @Re
11:13 14:7 15:4.
10. angel--omitted by A, B,
C, Vulgate, and Syriac. But Coptic
and ANDREAS
support it.
seat--Greek, "throne of the
beast": set up in arrogant mimicry of God's throne; the
dragon gave his throne to the beast (@Re
13:2).
darkness--parallel to the Egyptian plague of
darkness, Pharaoh being the type of Antichrist (compare
Notes, see on Re 15:2,3; compare the fifth trumpet, @Re
9:2).
gnawed their tongues for pain--Greek,
"owing to the pain" occasioned by the previous
plagues, rendered more appalling by the darkness. Or, as
"gnashing of teeth" is one of the accompaniments of hell,
so this "gnawing of their tongues" is through rage at the
baffling of their hopes and the overthrow of their
kingdom. They meditate revenge and are unable to effect
it; hence their frenzy [GROTIUS].
Those in anguish, mental and bodily, bite their lips and
tongues.
11. sores--This shows that
each fresh plague was accompanied with the continuance of
the preceding plagues: there was an accumulation, not a
mere succession, of plagues.
repented not--(Compare @Re
16:9).
12. angel--so Coptic
and ANDREAS.
A, B, C, Vulgate, and Syriac omit.
kings of the east--Greek, "the kings
who are from the rising of the sun." Reference to the
Euphrates similarly occurs in the sixth trumpet. The
drying up of the Euphrates, I think, is to be taken
figuratively, as Babylon itself, which is situated
on it, is undoubtedly so, @Re
17:5. The waters of the Euphrates (compare @Isa
8:7,8) are spiritual Babylon's, that is, the apostate
Church's (of which Rome is the chief, though not exclusive
representative) spiritual and temporal powers. The drying
up of the waters of Babylon expresses the same thing as
the ten kings stripping, eating, and burning the whore.
The phrase, "way may be prepared for," is that applied to
the Lord's coming (@Isa
40:3 Mt 3:3 Lu 1:76). He shall come from the East
(@Mt
24:27 Eze 43:2, "the glory of the God of Israel came
from the way of the East"): not alone, for His
elect transfigured saints of Israel and the Gentiles shall
accompany Him, who are "kings and priests unto God"
(@Re
1:6). As the Antichristian ten kings accompany
the beast, so the saints accompany as kings the
King of kings to the last decisive conflict. DE
BURGH and
others take it of the Jews, who also were designed
to be a kingdom of priests to God on earth. They
shall, doubtless, become priest-kings in the flesh to the
nations in the flesh at His coming. Abraham from the East
(if @Isa
41:2,8,9, refers to him, and not Cyrus) conquering the
Chaldean kings is a type of Israel's victorious
restoration to the priest-kingdom. Israel's exodus after
the last Egyptian plagues typifies Israel's restoration
after the spiritual Babylon, the apostate Church, has been
smitten. Israel's promotion to the priest-kingdom after
Pharaoh's downfall, and at the Lord's descent at Sinai to
establish the theocracy, typifies the restored kingdom of
Israel at the Lord's more glorious descent, when
Antichrist shall be destroyed utterly. Thus, besides the
transfigured saints, Israel secondarily may be meant by
"the kings from the East" who shall accompany the "King of
kings" returning "from the way of the East" to reign over
His ancient people. As to the drying up again of
the waters opposing His people's assuming the
kingdom, compare @Isa
10:26 11:11,15 Zec 10:9-11. The name Israel (@Ge
32:28) implies a prince with God. Compare @Mic
4:8 as to the return of the kingdom to Jerusalem. DURHAM,
several centuries ago, interpreted the drying up of the
Euphrates to mean the wasting away of the Turkish power,
which has heretofore held Palestine, and so the way being
prepared for Israel's restoration. But as Babylon
refers to the apostate Church, not to Mohammedanism, the
drying up of the Euphrates (answering to Cyrus' overthrow
of literal Babylon by marching into it through the dry
channel of the Euphrates) must answer to the draining off
of the apostate Church's resources, the Roman and Greek
corrupt Church having been heretofore one of the greatest
barriers by its idolatries and persecutions in the way of
Israel's restoration and conversion. The kings of the
earth who are earthly (@Re
16:14), stand in contrast to the kings from the
East who are heavenly.
13. unclean spirits like frogs--the
antitype to the plague of frogs sent on Egypt. The
presence of the "unclean spirit" in the land (Palestine)
is foretold, @Zec
13:2, in connection with idolatrous prophets.
Beginning with infidelity as to Jesus Christ's coming in
the flesh, men shall end in the grossest idolatry of the
beast, the incarnation of all that is self-deifying and
God-opposed in the world powers of all ages; having
rejected Him that came in the Father's name, they shall
worship one that comes in his own, though really the
devil's representative; as frogs croak by night in marshes
and quagmires, so these unclean spirits in the darkness of
error teach lies amidst the mire of filthy lusts. They
talk of liberty, but it is not Gospel liberty, but
license for lust. There being three, as also
seven, in the description of the last and worst state
of the Jewish nation, implies a parody of the two divine
numbers, three of the Trinity, and seven of
the Holy Spirit (@Re
1:4). Some observe that three frogs were the
original arms of France, a country which has been the
center of infidelity, socialism, and false spiritualism. A
and B read, "as it were frogs," instead of "like
frogs," which is not supported by manuscripts. The unclean
spirit out of the mouth of the dragon symbolizes
the proud infidelity which opposes God and Christ. That
out of the beast's mouth is the spirit of the
world, which in the politics of men, whether lawless
democracy or despotism, sets man above God. That out of
the mouth of the false prophet is lying
spiritualism and religious delusion, which shall take the
place of the harlot when she shall have been destroyed.
the dragon--Satan, who gives his power and
throne (@Re
13:2) to the beast.
false prophet--distinct from the harlot, the
apostate Church (of which Rome is the chief, though not
sole, representative), @Re
17:1-3,16; and identical with the second beast,
@Re
13:11-15, as appears by comparing @Re
19:20 with @Re
13:13; ultimately consigned to the lake of fire with
the first beast; as is also the dragon a little later (@Re
20:10). The dragon, the beast, and the false prophet,
"the mystery of iniquity," form a blasphemous Antitrinity,
the counterfeit of "the mystery of godliness" God
manifests in Christ, witnessed to by the Spirit. The
dragon acts the part of God the Father, assigning his
authority to his representative the beast, as the Father
assigns His to the Son. They are accordingly jointly
worshipped; compare as to the Father and Son, @Joh
5:23; as the ten-horned beast has its ten horns
crowned with diadems (Greek, @Re
13:1), so Christ has on His head many diadems.
While the false prophet, like the Holy Ghost, speaks not
of himself, but tells all men to worship the beast, and
confirms his testimony to the beast by miracles, as
the Holy Ghost attested similarly to Christ's divine
mission.
14. devils--Greek,
"demons."
working miracles--Greek, "signs."
go forth unto--or "for," that is, to tempt
them to the battle with Christ.
the kings of the earth and, &c.--A, B,
Syriac, and ANDREAS
omit "of the earth and," which clause is not in any
manuscript. Translate, "kings of the whole habitable
world," who are "of this world," in contrast to "the kings
of (from) the East" (the sun-rising), @Re
16:12, namely, the saints to whom Christ has
appointed a kingdom, and who are "children of light."
God, in permitting Satan's miracles, as in the case
of the Egyptian magicians who were His instruments in
hardening Pharaoh's heart, gives the reprobate up to
judicial delusion preparatory to their destruction. As
Aaron's rod was changed into a serpent, so were those of
the Egyptian magicians. Aaron turned the water into blood;
so did the magicians. Aaron brought up frogs; so did the
magicians. With the frogs their power ceased. So
this, or whatever is antitypical to it, will be the last
effort of the dragon, beast, and false prophet.
battle--Greek, "war"; the final
conflict for the kingship of the world described in @Re
19:17-21.
15. The gathering of the
world kings with the beast against the Lamb is the signal
for Christ's coming; therefore He here gives the charge to
be watching for His coming and clothed in the garments of
justification and sanctification, so as to be accepted.
thief--(@Mt
24:43 2Pe 3:10).
they--saints and angels.
shame--literally, "unseemliness" (Greek,
"aschemosunee"): Greek, @1Co
13:5: a different word from the Greek in @Re
3:18 (Greek, "aischunee").
16. he--rather, "they (the
three unclean spirits) gathered them together." If
English Version be retained, "He" will refer to God
who gives them over to the delusion of the three unclean
spirits; or else the sixth angel (@Re
16:12).
Armageddon--Hebrew, "Har," a
mountain, and "Megiddo" in Manasseh in Galilee, the
scene of the overthrow of the Canaanite kings by God's
miraculous interposition under Deborah and Barak; the same
as the great plain of Esdraelon. Josiah, too, as the ally
of Babylon, was defeated and slain at Megiddo; and the
mourning of the Jews at the time just before God shall
interpose for them against all the nations confederate
against Jerusalem, is compared to the mourning for Josiah
at Megiddo. Megiddo comes from a root, gadad,
"cut off," and means slaughter. Compare @Joe
3:2,12,14, where "the valley of Jehoshaphat" (meaning
in Hebrew, "judgment of God") is mentioned as the
scene of God's final vengeance on the God-opposing foe.
Probably some great plain, antitypical to the valleys of
Megiddo and Jehoshaphat, will be the scene.
17. angel--so ANDREAS.
But A, B, Vulgate, and Syriac omit it.
into--so ANDREAS
(Greek, "eis"). But A and B, "upon" (Greek,
"epi").
great--so B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic,
and ANDREAS.
But A omits.
of heaven--so B and ANDREAS
But A, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic omit.
It is done--"It is come to pass." God's voice
as to the final consummation, as Jesus' voice on the cross
when the work of expiation was completed, "It is
finished."
18. voice . . . thunders . . .
lightnings--A has the order, "lightnings . . . voices
. . . thunders." This is the same close as that of the
seven seals and the seven thunders; but with the
difference that they do not merely form the conclusion,
but introduce the consequence, of the last vial, namely,
the utter destruction of Babylon and then of the
Antichristian armies.
earthquake--which is often preceded by a
lurid state of air, such as would result from the vial
poured upon it.
men were--so B, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS.
But A and Coptic read, "A man was."
so mighty--Greek, "such."
19. the great city--the
capital and seat of the apostate Church, spiritual Babylon
(of which Rome is the representative, if one literal city
be meant). The city in @Re
11:8 (see on
Re 11:8), is probably distinct, namely, Jerusalem
under Antichrist (the beast, who is distinct from
the harlot or apostate Church). In @Re
11:13 only a tenth of Jerusalem falls whereas
here the city (Babylon) "became (Greek) into three
parts" by the earthquake.
cities of the nations--other great cities in
league with spiritual Babylon.
great . . . came in remembrance--Greek,
"Babylon the great was remembered" (@Re
18:5). It is now that the last call to escape from
Babylon is given to God's people in her (@Re
18:4).
fierceness--the boiling over outburst
of His wrath (Greek, "thumou orgees"),
compare Note, see on Re 14:10.
20. Plainly parallel to @Re
6:14-17, and by anticipation descriptive of the last
judgment.
the mountains--rather as Greek, "there
were found no mountains."
21. fell--Greek,
"descends."
upon men--Greek, "the men."
and men blasphemed God--not those struck who
died, but the rest. Unlike the result in the case of
Jerusalem (@Re
11:13), where "the remnant . . . affrighted . . . gave
glory to the God of heaven."
was--Greek, "is."
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