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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER
19
@Re
19:1-21. THE
CHURCH'S THANKSGIVING
IN HEAVEN FOR
THE JUDGMENT
ON THE HARLOT.
THE MARRIAGE
OF THE LAMB:
THE SUPPER:
THE BRIDE'S
PREPARATION:
JOHN IS
FORBIDDEN TO
WORSHIP THE ANGEL:
THE LORD
AND HIS
HOSTS COME
FORTH FOR WAR:
THE BEAST
AND THE FALSE
PROPHET CAST
INTO THE LAKE
OF FIRE:
THE KINGS
AND THEIR
FOLLOWERS SLAIN
BY THE SWORD
OUT OF CHRIST'S
MOUTH.
1. As in the case of the
opening of the prophecy, @Re
4:8 5:9, &c.; so now, at one of the great closing
events seen in vision. the judgment on the harlot
(described in @Re
18:1-24), there is a song of praise in heaven to God:
compare @Re
7:10, &c., toward the close of the seals, and @Re
11:15-18, at the close of the trumpets: @Re
15:3, at the saints' victory over the beast.
And--so ANDREAS.
But A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic
omit.
a great voice--A, B, C, Vulgate, Coptic,
and ANDREAS
read, "as it were a great voice." What a contrast
to the lamentations @Re
18:1-24! Compare @Jer
51:48. The great manifestation of God's power
in destroying Babylon calls forth a great voice of
praise in heaven.
people--Greek, "multitude."
Alleluia--Hebrew, "Praise ye JAH,"
or JEHOVAH:
here first used in Revelation, whence ELLICOTT
infers the Jews bear a prominent part in this
thanksgiving. JAH
is not a contraction of "JEHOVAH,"
as it sometimes occurs jointly with the latter. It means
"He who Is": whereas Jehovah is "He who will be, is, and
was." It implies God experienced as a
PRESENT help; so
that "Hallelujah," says KIMCHI
in BENGEL, is
found first in the Psalms on the destruction of the
ungodly. "Hallelu-Jah" occurs four times in this
passage. Compare @Ps
149:4-9, which is plainly parallel, and indeed
identical in many of the phrases, as well as the general
idea. Israel, especially, will join in the Hallelujah,
when "her warfare is accomplished" and her foe destroyed.
Salvation, &c.--Greek, "The
salvation . . . the glory . . . the power."
and honour--so Coptic. But A, B, C,
and Syriac omit.
unto the Lord our God--so ANDREAS.
But A, B, C, and Coptic read, "(Is) of our God,"
that is, belongs to Him.
2. which did corrupt the earth--Greek,
"used to corrupt" continually. "Instead of opposing
and lessening, she promoted the sinful life and decay of
the world by her own earthliness, allowing the salt to
lose its savor" [AUBERLEN].
avenged--Greek, "exacted in
retribution." A particular application of the principle (@Ge
9:5).
blood of his servants--literally shed by the
Old Testament adulterous Church, and by the New Testament
apostate Church; also virtually, though not literally, by
all who, though called Christians, hate their brother, or
love not the brethren of Christ, but shrink from the
reproach of the cross, and show unkindness towards those
who bear it.
3. again--Greek, "a
second time."
rose up--Greek, "goeth up."
for ever and ever--Greek, "to the ages
of the ages."
4. beasts--rather, "living
creatures."
sat--Greek, "sitteth."
5. out of--Greek,
"out from the throne" in A, B, C.
Praise our God--Compare the solemn act of
praise performed by the Levites, @1Ch
16:36 23:5, especially when the house of God was
filled with the divine glory (@2Ch
5:13).
both--omitted in A, B, C, Vulgate, Coptic,
and Syriac. Translate as Greek, "the
small and the great."
6. many waters--Contrast
the "many waters" on which the whore sitteth (@Re
17:1). This verse is the hearty response to the
stirring call, "Alleluia! Praise our God" (@Re
19:4,5).
the Lord God omnipotent--Greek, "the
Omnipotent."
reigneth--literally, "reigned": hence
reigneth once for all. His reign is a fact already
established. Babylon, the harlot, was one great hindrance
to His reign being recognized. Her overthrow now clears
the way for His advent to reign; therefore, not merely
Rome, but the whole of Christendom in so far as it is
carnal and compromised Christ for the world, is
comprehended in the term "harlot." The beast hardly arises
when he at once "goeth into perdition": so that Christ is
prophetically considered as already reigning, so soon does
His advent follow the judgment on the harlot.
7. glad . . . rejoice--Greek,
"rejoice . . . exult."
give--so B and ANDREAS.
But A reads, "we will give."
glory--Greek, "the glory."
the marriage of the Lamb is come--The full
and final consummation is at @Re
21:2-9, &c. Previously there must be the overthrow of
the beast, &c., at the Lord's coming, the binding of
Satan, the millennial reign, the loosing of Satan and his
last overthrow, and the general judgment. The
elect-Church, the heavenly Bride, soon after the
destruction of the harlot, is transfigured at the Lord's
coming, and joins with Him in His triumph over the beast.
On the emblem of the heavenly Bridegroom and Bride,
compare @Mt
22:2 25:6,10 2Co 11:2. Perfect union with Him
personally, and participation in His holiness; joy, glory,
and kingdom, are included in this symbol of "marriage";
compare Song of Solomon everywhere. Besides the
heavenly Bride, the transfigured, translated, and
risen Church, reigning over the earth with Christ,
there is also the earthly bride, Israel, in the
flesh, never yet divorced, though for a time
separated, from her divine husband, who shall then be
reunited to the Lord, and be the mother Church of the
millennial earth, Christianized through her. Note, we
ought, as Scripture does, restrict the language drawn from
marriage-love to the Bride, the Church as a
whole; not use it as individuals in our relation to
Christ, which Rome does in the case of her nuns.
Individually, believers are effectually-called guests;
collectively, they constitute the bride. The harlot
divides her affections among many lovers: the bride gives
hers exclusively to Christ.
8. granted--Though in one
sense she "made herself ready," having by the
Spirit's work in her put on "the wedding garment," yet in
the fullest sense it is not she, but her Lord, who makes
her ready by "granting to her that she be arrayed
in fine linen." It is He who, by giving Himself for
her, presents her to Himself a glorious Church, not
having spot, but holy and without blemish. It is He
also who sanctifies her, naturally vile and without
beauty, with the washing of water by the word, and puts
His own comeliness on her, which thus becomes hers.
clean and white--so ANDREAS.
But A and B transpose. Translate, "bright and pure"; at
once brilliantly splendid and spotless as in
the bride herself.
righteousness--Greek, "righteousnesses";
distributively used. Each saint must have this
righteousness: not merely be justified, as if the
righteousness belonged to the Church in the aggregate;
the saints together have righteousnesses; namely,
He is accounted as "the Lord our righteousness" to
each saint on his believing, their robes being made
white in the blood of the Lamb. The righteousness of
the saint is not, as ALFORD
erroneously states, inherent, but is imputed:
if it were otherwise, Christ would be merely enabling the
sinner to justify himself. @Ro
5:18 is decisive on this. Compare Article XI, Church
of England. The justification already given to the saints
in title and unseen possession, is now
GIVEN them in
manifestation: they openly walk with Christ in
white. To this, rather than to their primary
justification on earth, the reference is here. Their
justification before the apostate world, which had
persecuted them, contrasts with the judgment and
condemnation of the harlot. "Now that the harlot has
fallen, the woman triumphs" [AUBERLEN].
Contrast with the pure fine linen (indicating the
simplicity and purity) of the bride, the tawdry
ornamentation of the harlot. Babylon, the apostate Church,
is the antithesis to new Jerusalem, the transfigured
Church of God. The woman (@Re
12:1-6), the harlot (@Re
17:1-7), the bride (@Re
19:1-10), are the three leading aspects of the Church.
9. He--God by His angel
saith unto me.
called--effectually, not merely externally.
The "unto," or into," seems to express this: not merely
invited to (Greek, "epi"), but called
INTO, so as
to be partakers of (Greek, "eis");
compare @1Co
1:9.
marriage supper--Greek, "the supper of
the marriage." Typified by the Lord's Supper.
true--Greek, "genuine"; veritable
sayings which shall surely be fulfilled, namely, all the
previous revelations.
10. at--Greek,
"before." John's intending to worship the angel here, as
in @Re
22:8, on having revealed to him the glory of the new
Jerusalem, is the involuntary impulse of adoring joy at so
blessed a prospect. It forms a marked contrast to the
sorrowful wonder with which he had looked on the
Church in her apostasy as the harlot (@Re
17:6). It exemplifies the corrupt tendencies of our
fallen nature that even John, an apostle, should have all
but fallen into "voluntary humility and worshipping of
angels," which Paul warns us against.
and of thy brethren--that is, a fellow
servant of thy brethren.
have the testimony of Jesus--(See on Re
12:17).
the testimony of--that is, respecting
Jesus.
is the spirit of prophecy--is the result of
the same spirit of prophecy in you as in myself. We
angels, and you apostles, all alike have the testimony of
(bear testimony concerning) Jesus by the operation of one
and the same Spirit, who enables me to show you these
revelations and enables you to record them: wherefore we
are fellow servants, not I your lord to be
worshipped by you. Compare @Re
22:9, "I am fellow servant of thee and of thy brethren
the prophets"; whence the "FOR
the testimony," &c. here, may be explained as giving the
reason for his adding "and (fellow servant) of thy
brethren that have the testimony of Jesus." I mean, of
the prophets; "for it is of Jesus that thy
brethren, the prophets, testify by the Spirit in
them." A clear condemnation of Romish invocation of saints
as if they were our superiors to be adored.
11. behold a white horse; and
he that sat upon him--identical with @Re
6:2. Here as there he comes forth "conquering and to
conquer." Compare the ass-colt on which He rode
into Jerusalem (@Mt
21:1-7). The horse was used for war: and here
He is going forth to war with the beast. The ass is
for peace. His riding on it into Jerusalem is an earnest
of His reign in Jerusalem over the earth, as the Prince
of peace, after all hostile powers have been
overthrown. When the security of the world power, and the
distress of the people of God, have reached the highest
point, the Lord Jesus shall appear visibly from heaven to
put an end to the whole course of the world, and establish
His kingdom of glory. He comes to judge with vengeance the
world power, and to bring to the Church redemption,
transfiguration, and power over the world. Distinguish
between this coming (@Mt
24:27,29,37,39; Greek, "parousia") and
the end, or final judgment (@Mt
25:31 1Co 15:23). Powerful natural phenomena shall
accompany His advent [AUBERLEN].
12. Identifying Him with
the Son of man similarly described, @Re
1:14.
many crowns--Greek, "diadems": not
merely (Greek, "stephanoi") garlands of
victory, but royal crowns, as KING
OF KINGS. Christ's diadem comprises
all the diadems of the earth and of heavenly powers too.
Contrast the papal tiara composed of three diadems.
Compare also the little horn (Antichrist) that overcomes
the three horns or kingdoms, @Da
7:8,24 (Quære, the Papacy? or some three
kingdoms that succeed the papacy, which itself, as a
temporal kingdom, was made up at first of three
kingdoms, the exarchate of Ravenna, the kingdom of the
Lombards, and the state of Rome, obtained by Pope Zachary
and Stephen II from Pepin, the usurper of the French
dominion). Also, the seven crowns (diadems) on
the seven heads of the dragon (@Re
12:3), and ten diadems on the ten heads of the
beast. These usurpers claim the diadems which belong
to Christ alone.
he had a name written--B and Syriac
insert, "He had names written, and a name written,"
&c. meaning that the names of the dominion which
each diadem indicated were written on them
severally. But A, Vulgate, ORIGEN,
and CYPRIAN
omits the words, as English Version.
name . . . that no man knew but . . . himself--(@Jud
13:18 1Co 2:9,11 1Jo 3:2). The same is said of the
"new name" of believers. In this, as in all other
respects, the disciple is made like his Lord. The Lord's
own "new name" is to be theirs, and to be "in their
foreheads"; whence we may infer that His as yet unknown
name also is written on His forehead; as the high priest
had "Holiness to the Lord" inscribed on the miter on his
brow. John saw it as "written," but knew not its
meaning. It is, therefore, a name which in all its
glorious significancy can be only understood when the
union of His saints with Him, and His and their joint
triumph and reign, shall be perfectly manifested at the
final consummation.
13. vesture dipped in blood--@Isa
63:2 is alluded to here, and in @Re
19:15, end. There the blood is not His own, but
that of His foes. So here the blood on His "vesture,"
reminding us of His own blood shed for even the
ungodly who trample on it, is a premonition of the
shedding of their blood in righteous retribution.
He sheds the blood, not of the godly, as the harlot and
beast did, but of the blood-stained ungodly, including
them both.
The Word of God--who made the world, is He
also who under the same character and attributes shall
make it anew. His title, Son of God, is applicable
in a lower sense, also to His people; but "the Word of
God" indicates His incommunicable Godhead, joined to His
manhood, which He shall then manifest in glory. "The Bride
does not fear the Bridegroom; her love casteth out fear.
She welcomes Him; she cannot be happy but at His side. The
Lamb [@Re
19:9, the aspect of Christ to His people at His
coming] is the symbol of Christ in His gentleness. Who
would be afraid of a lamb? Even a little child, instead of
being scared, desires to caress it. There is nothing to
make us afraid of God but sin, and Jesus is the Lamb of
God that taketh away the sin of the world. What a
fearful contrast is the aspect which He will wear towards
His enemies! Not as the Bridegroom and the Lamb, but as
the [avenging] judge and warrior stained in the blood of
His enemies."
14. the armies . . . in heaven--Compare
"the horse bridles," @Re
14:20. The glorified saints whom God "will bring with"
Christ at His advent; compare @Re
17:14, "they that are with Him, called, chosen,
faithful"; as also "His mighty angels."
white and clean--Greek, "pure." A, B,
Vulgate, Syriac, and CYPRIAN
omit "and," which ORIGEN
and ANDREAS
retain, as English Version.
15. out of his mouth . . .
sword--(@Re
1:16 2:12,16). Here in its avenging power, @2Th
2:8, "consume with the Spirit of His mouth" (@Isa
11:4, to which there is allusion here); not in its
convicting and converting efficacy (@Eph
6:17 Heb 4:12,13, where also the judicial keenness of
the sword-like word is included). The Father commits the
judgment to the Son.
he shall rule--The HE is emphatic, He and
none other, in contrast to the usurpers who have misruled
on earth. "Rule," literally, "tend as a shepherd"; but
here in a punitive sense. He, who would have shepherded
them with pastoral rod and with the golden scepter of His
love, shall dash them in pieces, as refractory rebels,
with "a rod of iron."
treadeth . . . wine-press--(@Isa
63:3).
of the fierceness and wrath--So ANDREAS
reads. But A, B, Vulgate, Coptic, and ORIGEN
read, "of the fierceness (or boiling indignation)
of the wrath," omitting "and."
Almighty--The fierceness of Christ's wrath
against His foes will be executed with the resources of
omnipotence.
16. "His name written on
His vesture and on His thigh," was written partly on the
vesture, partly on the thigh itself, at the part where in
an equestrian figure the robe drops from the thigh. The
thigh symbolizes Christ's humanity as having come,
after the flesh, from the loins of David, and now
appearing as the glorified "Son of man." On the other
hand, His incommunicable divine name, "which no man knew,"
is on His head (@Re
19:12), [MENOCHIUS].
KING OF KINGS--Compare @Re
17:14, in contrast with @Re
19:17, the beast being in attempted usurpation a
king of kings, the ten kings delivering their kingdom
to him.
17. an--Greek,
"one."
in the sun--so as to be conspicuous in sight
of the whole world.
to all the fowls--(@Eze
39:17-20).
and gather yourselves--A, B, Vulgate,
Syriac, Coptic, and ANDREAS
read, "be gathered," omitting "and."
of the great God--A, B, Vulgate, Syriac,
Coptic, and ANDREAS
read, "the great supper (that is, banquet) of God."
18. Contrast with this
"supper," @Re
19:17,18, the marriage supper of the Lamb, @Re
19:9.
captains--Greek, "captains of
thousands," that is, chief captains. The "kings"
are "the ten" who "give their power unto the beast."
free and bond--specified in @Re
13:16, as "receiving the mark of the beast." The
repetition of flesh (in the Greek it is
plural: masses of flesh) five times in this verse,
marks the gross carnality of the followers of the
beast. Again, the giving of their flesh to the fowls to
eat, is a righteous retribution for their not suffering
the dead bodies of Christ's
witnesses to be put in graves.
19. gathered together--at
Armageddon, under the sixth vial. For "their
armies" in B and ANDREAS,
there is found "His armies" in A.
war--so ANDREAS.
But A and B read, "the war," namely, that foretold,
@Re
16:14 17:4.
20. and with him the false
prophet--A reads, "and those with him." B reads, "and
he who was with him, the false prophet."
miracles--Greek, "the miracles"
(literally, "signs") recorded already (@Re
13:14) as wrought by the second beast before
(literally, 'in sight of') the first beast. Hence
it follows the second beast is identical with
the false prophet. Many expositors represent the first
beast to be the secular, the second beast to be the
ecclesiastical power of Rome; and account for the change
of title for the latter from the "other beast" to the
"false prophet," is because by the judgment on the harlot,
the ecclesiastical power will then retain nothing of its
former character save the power to deceive. I think it not
unlikely that the false prophet will be the successor of
the spiritual pretensions of the papacy; while the beast
in its last form as the fully revealed Antichrist will be
the secular representative and embodiment of the fourth
world kingdom, Rome, in its last form of intensified
opposition to God. Compare with this prophecy, @Eze
38:1-39:29 Da 2:34,35,44 11:44,45 12:1 Joe 3:9-17 Zec
12:1-14:21. Daniel (@Da
7:8) makes no mention of the second beast, or false
prophet, but mentions that "the little horn" has "the eyes
of a man," that is, cunning and intellectual culture; this
is not a feature of the first beast in the thirteenth
chapter, but is expressed by the Apocalyptic "false
prophet," the embodiment of man's unsanctified knowledge,
and the subtlety of the old serpent. The first beast is a
political power; the second is a spiritual power--the
power of ideas. But both are beasts, the worldly
Antichristian wisdom serving the worldly Antichristian
power. The dragon is both lion and serpent. As the first
law in God's moral government is that "judgment should
begin at the house of God," and be executed on the harlot,
the faithless Church, by the world power with which she
had committed spiritual adultery, so it is a second law
that the world power, after having served as God's
instrument of punishment, is itself punished. As the
harlot is judged by the beast and the ten kings, so these
are destroyed by the Lord Himself coming in person. So @Zep
1:1-18 compared with @Zep
2:1-15. And Jeremiah, after denouncing Jerusalem's
judgment by Babylon, ends with denouncing Babylon's own
doom. Between the judgment on the harlot and the Lord's
destruction of the beast, will intervene that season in
which earthly-mindedness will reach its culmination, and
Antichristianity triumph for its short three and a half
days during which the two witnesses lie dead. Then shall
the Church be ripe for her glorification, the
Antichristian world for destruction. The world at the
highest development of its material and spiritual power is
but a decorated carcass round which the eagles gather. It
is characteristic that Antichrist and his kings, in their
blindness, imagine that they can wage war against the King
of heaven with earthly hosts; herein is shown the extreme
folly of Babylonian confusion. The Lord's mere appearance,
without any actual encounter, shows Antichrist his
nothingness; compare the effect of Jesus' appearance even
in His humiliation, @Joh
18:6 [AUBERLEN].
had received--rather as Greek,
"received," once for all.
them; that worshipped--literally, "them
worshipping" not an act once for all done, as the
"received" implies, but those in the habit of
"worshipping."
These both were cast . . . into a lake--Greek,
". . . the lake of fire," Gehenna. Satan is subsequently
cast into it, at the close of the outbreak which succeeds
the millennium (@Re
20:10). Then Death and Hell, as well those not found
at the general judgment "written in the book of life";
this constitutes "the second death."
alive--a living death; not mere annihilation.
"Their worm dieth not, their fire is not quenched."
21. the remnant--Greek,
"the rest," that is, "the kings and their armies" (@Re
19:19) classed together in one indiscriminate mass. A
solemn confirmation of the warning in @Ps
2:10.
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