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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 2
@Re
2:1-29. EPISTLES TO
EPHESUS, SMYRNA,
PERGAMOS, THYATIRA.
Each of the seven epistles in this
and the third chapter, commences with, "I know thy works."
Each contains a promise from Christ, "To him that
overcometh." Each ends with, "He that hath an ear, let him
hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches." The title
of our Lord in each case accords with the nature of the
address, and is mainly taken from the imagery of the
vision, @Re
1:12-16. Each address has a threat or a promise, and
most of the addresses have both. Their order seems to be
ecclesiastical, civil, and geographical: Ephesus first, as
being the Asiatic metropolis (termed "the light of Asia,"
and "first city of Asia"), the nearest to Patmos, where
John received the epistle to the seven churches, and also
as being that Church with which John was especially
connected; then the churches on the west coast of Asia;
then those in the interior. Smyrna and Philadelphia alone
receive unmixed praise. Sardis and Laodicea receive almost
solely censure. In Ephesus, Pergamos, and Thyatira, there
are some things to praise, others to condemn, the latter
element preponderating in one case (Ephesus), the former
in the two others (Pergamos and Thyatira). Thus the main
characteristics of the different states of different
churches, in all times and places, are portrayed, and they
are suitably encouraged or warned.
1. Ephesus--famed for the
temple of Diana, one of the seven wonders of the world.
For three years Paul labored there. He subsequently
ordained Timothy superintending overseer or bishop there:
probably his charge was but of a temporary nature. John,
towards the close of his life, took it as the center from
which he superintended the province.
holdeth--Greek, "holdeth fast," as in
@Re
2:25 Re 3:11; compare @Joh
10:28,29. The title of Christ here as "holding fast
the seven stars (from @Re
1:16: only that, for having is substituted
holding fast in His grasp), and walking in the midst
of the seven candlesticks," accords with the beginning of
His address to the seven churches representing the
universal Church. Walking expresses His unwearied
activity in the Church, guarding her from internal and
external evils, as the high priest moved to and fro in the
sanctuary.
2. I know thy works--expressing
His omniscience. Not merely "thy professions, desires,
good resolutions" (@Re
14:13, end).
thy labour--Two oldest manuscripts omit
"thy"; one supports it. The Greek means "labor
unto weariness."
patience--persevering endurance.
bear--evil men are a burden
which the Ephesian Church regarded as intolerable. We are
to "bear (the same Greek, @Ga
6:2) one another's burdens" in the case of weak
brethren; but not to bear false brethren.
tried--by experiment; not the Greek
for "test," as @1Jo
4:1. The apostolical churches had the miraculous gift
of discerning spirits. Compare @Ac
20:28-30, wherein Paul presciently warned the
Ephesian elders of the coming false teachers, as also
in writing to Timothy at Ephesus. TERTULLIAN
[On Baptism, 17], and JEROME
[On Illustrious Men, in Lucca 7], record of John,
that when a writing, professing to be a canonical history
of the acts of Paul, had been composed by a presbyter of
Ephesus, John convicted the author and condemned the work.
So on one occasion he would not remain under the same roof
with Cerinthus the heretic.
say they are apostles--probably Judaizers. IGNATIUS
[Epistle to the Ephesians, 6], says subsequently, "Onesimus
praises exceedingly your good discipline that no heresy
dwells among you"; and [Epistle to the Ephesians,
9], "Ye did not permit those having evil doctrine to sow
their seed among you, but closed your ears."
3. borne . . . patience--The
oldest manuscripts transpose these words. Then translate
as Greek, "persevering endurance . . . borne."
"Thou hast borne" My reproach, but "thou canst not bear
the evil" (@Re
2:2). A beautiful antithesis.
and . . . hast laboured, and hast not fainted--The
two oldest manuscripts and oldest versions read, "and
. . . hast not labored," omitting "and hast fainted." The
difficulty which transcribers by English Version
reading tried to obviate, was the seeming contradiction,
"I know thy labor . . . and thou hast not
labored." But what is meant is, "Thou hast not been
wearied out with labor."
4. somewhat . . . because--Translate,
"I have against thee (this) that," &c. It is not a
mere somewhat"; it is everything. How characteristic of
our gracious Lord, that He puts foremost all He can find
to approve, and only after this notes the shortcomings!
left thy first love--to Christ. Compare @1Ti
5:12, "cast off their first faith." See the Ephesians'
first love, @Eph
1:15. This epistle was written under Domitian, when
thirty years had elapsed since Paul had written his
Epistle to them. Their warmth of love had given place to a
lifeless orthodoxy. Compare Paul's view of faith so called
without love, @1Co
13:2.
5. whence--from what a
height.
do the first works--the works which
flowed from thy first love. Not merely "feel thy
first feelings," but do works flowing from the same
principle as formerly, "faith which worketh by love."
I will come--Greek, "I am coming" in
special judgment on thee.
quickly--omitted in two oldest manuscripts,
Vulgate and Coptic versions: supported by
one oldest manuscript.
remove thy candlestick out of his place--I
will take away the Church from Ephesus and remove it
elsewhere. "It is removal of the candlestick, not
extinction of the candle, which is threatened here;
judgment for some, but that very judgment the occasion of
mercy for others. So it has been. The seat of the Church
has been changed, but the Church itself survives. What the
East has lost, the West has gained. One who lately visited
Ephesus found only three Christians there, and these so
ignorant as scarcely to have heard the names of St. Paul
or St. John" [TRENCH].
6. But--How graciously,
after necessary censure, He returns to praise for our
consolation, and as an example to us, that we would
show, when we reprove, we have more pleasure in praising
than in fault-finding.
hatest the deeds--We should hate men's evil
deeds, not hate the men themselves.
Nicolaitanes--IRENÆUS
[Against Heresies, 1.26.3] and TERTULLIAN
[Prescription against Heretics, 46] make these
followers of Nicolas, one of the seven (honorably
mentioned, @Ac
6:3,5). They (CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA [Miscellanies,
2.20 3.4] and EPIPHANIUS
[Heresies, 25]) evidently confound the latter
Gnostic Nicolaitanes, or followers of one Nicolaos, with
those of Revelation. MICHAELIS'
view is probable: Nicolaos (conqueror of the people)
is the Greek version of Balaam, from Hebrew
"Belang Am," "Destroyer of the people." Revelation
abounds in such duplicate Hebrew and Greek
names: as Apollyon, Abaddon: Devil, Satan: Yea (Greek,
"Nai"), Amen. The name, like other names, Egypt,
Babylon, Sodom, is symbolic. Compare @Re
2:14,15, which shows the true sense of Nicolaitanes;
they are not a sect, but professing Christians who, like
Balaam of old. tried to introduce into the Church a false
freedom, that is, licentiousness; this was a reaction in
the opposite direction from Judaism, the first danger to
the Church combated in the council of Jerusalem, and by
Paul in the Epistle to Galatians. These symbolical
Nicolaitanes, or followers of Balaam, abused Paul's
doctrine of the grace of God into a plea for
lasciviousness (@2Pe
2:15,16,19 Jude 1:4,11 who both describe the same sort
of seducers as followers of Balaam). The difficulty
that they should appropriate a name branded with infamy in
Scripture is met by TRENCH:
The Antinomian Gnostics were so opposed to John as a
Judaizing apostle that they would assume as a name of
chiefest honor one which John branded with dishonor.
7. He that hath an ear--This
clause precedes the promise in the first three addresses,
succeeds it in the last four. Thus the promises are
enclosed on both sides with the precept urging the deepest
attention as to the most momentous truths. Every man "hath
an ear" naturally, but he alone will be able to hear
spiritually to whom God has given "the hearing ear"; whose
"ear God hath wakened" and "opened." Compare "Faith, the
ears of the soul" [CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA].
the Spirit saith--What Christ saith,
the Spirit saith; so one are the Second and Third
Persons.
unto the churches--not merely to the
particular, but to the universal Church.
overcometh--In John's Gospel (@Joh
16:33) and First Epistle (@1Jo
2:,13,14,5:4,5) an object follows, namely, "the
world," "the wicked one." Here, where the final issue is
spoken of, the conqueror is named absolutely. Paul
uses a similar image (@1Co
9:24,25 2Ti 2:5; but not the same as John's phrase,
except @Ro
12:21).
will I give--as the Judge. The tree of life
in Paradise, lost by the fall, is restored by the
Redeemer. Allusions to it occur in @Pr
3:18 11:30 13:12 15:4, and prophetically, @Re
22:2,14 Eze 47:12; compare @Joh
6:51. It is interesting to note how closely these
introductory addresses are linked to the body of
Revelation. Thus, the tree of life here, with @Re
22:1; deliverance from the second death (@Re
2:11), with @Re
20:14 21:8; the new name (@Re
2:17), with @Re
14:1; power over the nations, with @Re
20:4; the morning star (@Re
2:28), with @Re
22:16; the white raiment (@Re
3:5), with @Re
4:4 16:15; the name in the book of life (@Re
3:5), with @Re
13:8 20:15; the new Jerusalem and its
citizenship (@Re
3:12), with @Re
21:10.
give . . . tree of life--The thing promised
corresponds to the kind of faithfulness manifested. They
who refrain from Nicolaitane indulgences (@Re
2:6) and idol-meats (@Re
2:14,15), shall eat of meat infinitely superior,
namely, the fruit of the tree of life, and the hidden
manna (@Re
2:17).
in the midst of the paradise--The oldest
manuscripts omit "the midst of." In @Ge
2:9 these words are appropriate, for there were
other trees in the garden, but not in the midst of
it. Here the tree of life is simply in the
paradise, for no other tree is mentioned in it; in @Re
22:2 the tree of life is "in the midst of the
street of Jerusalem"; from this the clause was inserted
here. Paradise (a Persian, or else Semitic word),
originally used of any garden of delight; then specially
of Eden; then the temporary abode of separate souls in
bliss; then "the Paradise of God," the third
heaven, the immediate presence of God.
of God--(@Eze
28:13). One oldest manuscript, with Vulgate, Syriac,
and Coptic, and CYPRIAN,
read, "MY
God," as in @Re
3:12. So Christ calls God, "My God and your
God" (@Joh
20:17; compare @Eph
1:17). God is our God, in virtue of being
peculiarly Christ's God. The main bliss of Paradise
is that it is the Paradise of God; God Himself
dwelling there (@Re
21:3).
8. Smyrna--in Ionia, a
little to the north of Ephesus. POLYCARP,
martyred in A.D.
168, eighty-six years after his conversion, was bishop,
and probably "the angel of the Church in Smyrna" meant
here. The allusions to persecutions and faithfulness unto
death accord with this view. IGNATIUS
[The Martyrdom of Ignatius 3], on his way to
martyrdom in Rome, wrote to POLYCARP,
then (A.D.
108) bishop of Smyrna; if his bishopric commenced ten or
twelve years earlier, the dates will harmonize. TERTULLIAN
[The Prescription against Heretics, 32], and IRENÆUS,
who had talked with POLYCARP
in youth, tell us POLYCARP
was consecrated bishop of Smyrna by St. John.
the first . . . the last . . . was dead . . . is
alive--The attributes of Christ most calculated to
comfort the Church of Smyrna under its persecutions;
resumed from @Re
1:17,18. As death was to Him but the gate to life
eternal, so it is to be to them (@Re
2:10,11).
9. thy works, and--omitted
in two oldest manuscripts, Vulgate, and Coptic.
Supported by one oldest manuscript.
tribulation--owing to persecution.
poverty--owing to "the spoiling of their
goods."
but thou art rich--in grace. Contrast
Laodicea, rich in the world's eyes and her own,
poor before God. "There are both poor rich-men, and
rich poor-men in God's sight" [TRENCH].
blasphemy of them--blasphemous calumny of
thee on the part of (or arising from) them.
say they are Jews, and are not--Jews by
national descent, but not spiritually of "the true
circumcision." The Jews blaspheme Christ as "the hanged
one." As elsewhere, so at Smyrna they bitterly opposed
Christianity; and at POLYCARP'S
martyrdom they joined the heathens in clamoring for his
being cast to the lions; and when there was an obstacle to
this, for his being burnt alive; and with their own hands
they carried logs for the pile.
synagogue of Satan--Only once is the term
"synagogue" in the New Testament used of the Christian
assembly, and that by the apostle who longest maintained
the union of the Church and Jewish Synagogue. As the Jews
more and more opposed Christianity, and it more and more
rooted itself in the Gentile world, the term "synagogue"
was left altogether to the former, and Christians
appropriated exclusively the honorable term "Church";
contrast an earlier time when the Jewish theocracy is
called "the Church in the wilderness." Compare @Nu
16:3 20:4, "congregation of the Lord." Even in
@Jas
2:2 it is "your (not the Lord's)
assembly." The Jews, who might have been "the
Church of God," had now, by their opposition and unbelief,
become the synagogue of Satan. So "the throne of Satan" (@Re
2:13) represents the heathens' opposition to
Christianity; "the depths of Satan" (@Re
2:24), the opposition of
heretics.
10. Fear none, &c.--the
oldest manuscripts read, "Fear not those things,"
&c. "The Captain of our salvation never keeps back what
those who faithfully witness for Him may have to bear for
His name's sake; never entices recruits by the promise
they shall find all things easy and pleasant there" [TRENCH].
devil--"the accuser." He acted, through
Jewish accusers against Christ and His people. The
conflict of the latter was not with mere flesh and blood,
but with the rulers of the darkness of this world.
tried--with temptation by "the devil."
The same event is often both a temptation from the
devil, and a trial from God--God sifting and
winnowing the man to separate his chaff from his wheat,
the devil sifting him in the hope that nothing but chaff
will be found in him [TRENCH].
ten days--not the ten persecutions from Nero
to Diocletian. LYRA
explains ten years on the year-day principle. The
shortness of the duration of the persecution is
evidently made the ground of consolation. The time of
trial shall be short, the duration of your joy shall be
for ever. Compare the use of "ten days" for a short time,
@Ge
24:55 Nu 11:19. Ten is the number of the world
powers hostile to the Church; compare the ten horns
of the beast, @Re
13:1.
unto death--so as even to endure death for My
sake.
crown of life--@Jas
1:12 2Ti 4:8, "crown of righteousness"; @1Pe
5:4, "crown of glory." The crown is the
garland, the mark of a conqueror, or of one
rejoicing, or at a feast; but diadem is
the mark of a KING.
11. shall not be hurt--Greek,
"shall not by any means (or possibly) be hurt."
the second death--"the lake of fire." "The
death in life of the lost, as contrasted with the life in
death of the saved" [TRENCH].
The phrase "the second death" is peculiar to the
Apocalypse. What matter about the first death, which
sooner or later must pass over us, if we escape the
second death? "It seems that they who die that death
shall be hurt by it; whereas, if it were
annihilation, and so a conclusion of their torments, it
would be no way hurtful, but highly beneficial to them.
But the living torments are the second death" [BISHOP
PEARSON].
"The life of the damned is death" [AUGUSTINE].
Smyrna (meaning myrrh) yielded its sweet perfume in
being bruised even to death. Myrrh was used in embalming
dead bodies (@Joh
19:39); was an ingredient in the holy anointing oil (@Ex
30:23); a perfume of the heavenly Bridegroom (@Ps
45:8), and of the bride (@So
3:6). "Affliction, like it, is bitter for the
time being, but salutary; preserving the elect from
corruption, and seasoning them for
immortality, and gives scope for the exercise of the
fragrantly breathing Christian virtues" [VITRINGA].
POLYCARP'S
noble words to his heathen judges who wished him to
recant, are well known: "Fourscore and six years have I
served the Lord, and He never wronged me, how then can I
blaspheme my King and Saviour?" Smyrna's faithfulness is
rewarded by its candlestick not having been removed out of
its place (@Re
2:5); Christianity has never wholly left it; whence
the Turks call it, "Infidel Smyrna."
12. TRENCH
prefers writing Pergamus, or rather, Pergamum,
on the river Caicus. It was capital of Attalus the
Second's kingdom, which was bequeathed by him to the
Romans, 133 B.C.
Famous for its library, founded by Eumenes (197-159), and
destroyed by Caliph Omar. Parchment, that is,
Pergamena charta, was here discovered for book
purposes. Also famous for the magnificent temple of
Æsculapius, the healing god [TACITUS,
Annals, 3.63].
he which hath the sharp sword with two edges--appropriate
to His address having a twofold bearing, a searching power
so as to convict and convert some (@Re
2:13,17), and to convict and condemn to punishment
others (@Re
2:14-16, especially @Re
2:16; compare also see on
Re 1:16).
13. I know thy works--Two
oldest manuscripts omit this clause; one oldest manuscript
retains it.
Satan's seat--rather as the Greek is
translated all through Revelation, "throne." Satan, in
impious mimicry of God's heavenly throne, sets up his
earthly throne (@Re
4:2). Æsculapius was worshipped there under the
serpent form; and Satan, the old serpent, as the
instigator (compare @Re
2:10) of fanatical devotees of Æsculapius, and,
through them, of the supreme magistracy at Pergamos,
persecuted one of the Lord's people (Antipas) even to
death. Thus, this address is an anticipatory preface to @Re
12:1-17; Note: "throne . . . the dragon,
Satan . . . war with her seed," @Re
12:5,9,17.
even in those days--Two oldest manuscripts
omit "even"; two retain it.
wherein--Two oldest manuscripts omit this
(then translate, "in the days of Antipas, My faithful
witness," or "martyr"); two retain it. Two oldest
manuscripts read, "My witness, MY faithful one"; two read
as English Version. Antipas is another form for
Antipater. SIMEON
METAPHRASTES
has a palpably legendary story, unknown to the early
Fathers, that Antipas, in Domitian's reign, was shut up in
a red-hot brazen bull, and ended his life in thanksgivings
and prayers. HENGSTENBERG
makes the name, like other apocalyptic names, symbolical,
meaning one standing out "against all" for Christ's sake.
14. few--in comparison of
the many tokens of thy faithfulness.
hold the doctrine of Balaam--"the teaching
of Balaam," namely, that which he "taught Balak." Compare
"the counsel of Balaam," @Nu
31:16. "Balak" is dative in the Greek, whence BENGEL
translates, "taught (the Moabites) for (that is, to
please) Balak." But though in Numbers it is not expressly
said he taught Balak, yet there is nothing said
inconsistent with his having done so; and JOSEPHUS
[Antiquities,4. 6. 6], says he did so. The dative
case is a Hebraism for the accusative case.
children--Greek, "sons of
Israel."
stumbling-block--literally, that part of a
trap on which the bait was laid, and which, when touched,
caused the trap to close on its prey; then any
entanglement to the foot [TRENCH].
eat things sacrificed unto idols--the act
common to the Israelites of old, and the Nicolaitanes in
John's day; he does not add what was peculiar to the
Israelites, namely, that they sacrificed to idols.
The temptation to eat idol-meats was a peculiarly strong
one to the Gentile converts. For not to do so involved
almost a withdrawal from partaking of any social meal with
the heathen around. For idol-meats, after a part had been
offered in sacrifice, were nearly sure to be on the
heathen entertainer's table; so much so, that the Greek
"to kill" (thuein) meant originally "to sacrifice."
Hence arose the decree of the council of Jerusalem
forbidding to eat such meats; subsequently some at Corinth
ate unscrupulously and knowingly of such meats, on
the ground that the idol is nothing; others needlessly
tortured themselves with scruples, lest unknowingly
they should eat of them when they got meat from the market
or in a heathen friend's house. Paul handles the question
in @1Co
8:1-13 10:25-33.
fornication--often connected with idolatry.
15. thou--emphatic: "So
THOU also
hast," As Balak and the Moabites of old had Balaam and his
followers literally, so hast thou also them that hold
the same Balaamite or Nicolaitane doctrine
spiritually or symbolically. Literal eating of idol-meats
and fornication in Pergamos were accompanied by spiritual
idolatry and fornication. So TRENCH
explains. But I prefer taking it, "THOU
also," as well as Ephesus ("in like manner" as
Ephesus; see below the oldest reading), hast . . .
Nicolaitanes, with this important difference, Ephesus, as
a Church, hates them and casts them out, but thou "hast
them," namely, in the Church.
doctrine--teaching (see on Re 2:6): namely,
to tempt God's people to idolatry.
which thing I hate--It is sin not to hate
what God hates. The Ephesian Church (@Re
2:6) had this point of superiority to Pergamos. But
the three oldest manuscripts, and Vulgate and
Syriac, read instead of "which I hate," "IN
LIKE MANNER."
16. The three oldest
manuscripts read, "Repent, therefore." Not only the
Nicolaitanes, but the whole Church of Pergamos is called
on to repent of not having hated the Nicolaitane
teaching and practice. Contrast Paul, @Ac
20:26.
I will come--I am coming.
fight against them--Greek, "war with
them"; with the Nicolaitanes primarily; but including also
chastisement of the whole Church at Pergamos:
compare "unto THEE."
with the sword of my mouth--resumed from @Re
1:16, but with an allusion to the drawn sword
with which the angel of the Lord confronted Balaam on his
way to curse Israel: an earnest of the sword by
which he and the seduced Israelites fell at last. The
spiritual Balaamites of John's day are to be smitten with
the Lord's spiritual sword, the word or "rod of His
mouth."
17. to eat--omitted in the
three oldest manuscripts.
the hidden manna--the heavenly food of
Israel, in contrast to the idol-meats (@Re
2:14). A pot of manna was laid up in the holy place
"before the testimony." The allusion is here to this:
probably also to the Lord's discourse (@Joh
6:31-35). Translate, "the manna which is hidden." As
the manna hidden in the sanctuary was by divine power
preserved from corruption, so Christ in His incorruptible
body has passed into the heavens, and is hidden there
until the time of His appearing. Christ Himself is the
manna "hidden" from the world, but revealed to the
believer, so that he has already a foretaste of His
preciousness. Compare as to Christ's own hidden food on
earth, @Joh
4:32,34, and @Job
23:12. The full manifestation shall be at His coming.
Believers are now hidden, even as their meat is hidden. As
the manna in the sanctuary, unlike the other manna, was
incorruptible, so the spiritual feast offered to all who
reject the world's dainties for Christ is everlasting: an
incorruptible body and life for ever in Christ at the
resurrection.
white stone . . . new name . . . no man knoweth
saving he--TRENCH'S
explanation seems best. White is the color and
livery of heaven. "New" implies something altogether
renewed and heavenly. The white stone is a glistening
diamond, the Urim borne by the high priest within the
choschen or breastplate of judgment, with the twelve
tribes' names on the twelve precious stones, next the
heart. The word Urim means "light," answering to
the color white. None but the high priest knew the
name written upon it, probably the incommunicable name of
God, "Jehovah." The high priest consulted it in some
divinely appointed way to get direction from God when
needful. The "new name" is Christ's (compare @Re
3:12, "I will write upon him My new name"):
some new revelation of Himself which shall hereafter be
imparted to His people, and which they alone are capable
of receiving. The connection with the "hidden manna" will
thus be clear, as none save the high priest had access to
the "manna hidden" in the sanctuary. Believers, as
spiritual priests unto God, shall enjoy the heavenly
antitypes to the hidden manna and the Urim stone. What
they had peculiarly to contend against at Pergamos was the
temptation to idol-meats, and fornication,
put in their way by Balaamites. As Phinehas was rewarded
with "an everlasting priesthood" for his zeal against
these very sins to which the Old Testament Balaam seduced
Israel; so the heavenly high priesthood is the reward
promised here to those zealous against the New Testament
Balaamites tempting Christ's people to the same sins.
receiveth it--namely, "the stone"; not "the
new name"; see above. The "name that no man knew but
Christ Himself," He shall hereafter reveal to His people.
18. Thyatira--in Lydia,
south of Pergamos. Lydia, the purple-seller of this city,
having been converted at Philippi, a Macedonian city (with
which Thyatira, as being a Macedonian colony, had
naturally much intercourse), was probably the instrument
of first carrying the Gospel to her native town. John
follows the geographical order here, for Thyatira lay a
little to the left of the road from Pergamos to Sardis [STRABO,
13:4].
Son of God . . . eyes like . . . fire . . . feet
. . . like fine brass--or "glowing brass" (see on Re
1:14,15, whence this description is resumed). Again His
attributes accord with His address. The title "Son of
God," is from @Ps
2:7,9, which is referred to in @Re
2:27. The attribute, "eyes like a flame," &c. answers
to @Re
2:23, "I am He which searcheth the reins and hearts."
The attribute, "feet like . . . brass," answers to @Re
2:27, "as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken
to shivers," He treading them to pieces with
His strong feet.
19. The oldest manuscripts
transpose the English Version order, and read,
"faith and service." The four are subordinate to "thy
works"; thus, "I know thy works, even the love and
the faith (these two forming one pair, as 'faith works by
love,' @Ga
5:6), and the service (ministration to the
suffering members of the Church, and to all in spiritual
or temporal need), and the endurance of (that is, shown
by) thee (this pronoun belongs to all four)." As love
is inward, so service is its outward manifestation.
Similarly, faith and persevering endurance,
or "patient continuance (the same Greek as
here, @Ro
2:7) in well-doing," are connected.
and thy works; and the last--Omit the second
"and," with the three oldest manuscripts and the ancient
versions; translate, "And (I know) thy works which are
last (to be) more in number than the first"; realizing @1Th
4:1; the converse of @Mt
12:45 2Pe 2:20. Instead of retrograding from "the
first works" and "first love," as Ephesus, Thyatira's
last works exceeded her first (@Re
2:4,5).
20. a few things--omitted
in the three oldest manuscripts. Translate then, "I have
against thee that," &c.
sufferest--The three oldest manuscripts read,
"lettest alone."
that woman--Two oldest manuscripts read, "THY
wife"; two omit it. Vulgate and most ancient
versions read as English Version. The symbolical
Jezebel was to the Church of Thyatira what Jezebel, Ahab's
"wife," was to him. Some self-styled prophetess (or as the
feminine in Hebrew is often used collectively
to express a multitude, a set of false prophets),
as closely attached to the Church of Thyatira as a wife
is to a husband, and as powerfully influencing for evil
that Church as Jezebel did Ahab. As Balaam, in Israel's
early history, so Jezebel, daughter of Eth-baal, king of
Sidon (@1Ki
16:31, formerly priest of Astarte, and murderer of his
predecessor on the throne, JOSEPHUS
[Against Apion, 1.18]), was the great seducer to
idolatry in Israel's later history. Like her father, she
was swift to shed blood. Wholly given to Baal worship,
like Eth-baal, whose name expresses his idolatry, she,
with her strong will, seduced the weak Ahab and Israel
beyond the calf-worship (which was a worship of the true
God under the cherub-ox form, that is, a violation of the
second commandment) to that of Baal (a violation of the
first commandment also). She seems to have been herself a
priestess and prophetess of Baal. Compare @2Ki
9:22,30, "whoredoms of . . . Jezebel and her
witchcrafts" (impurity was part of the worship of the
Phoenician Astarte, or Venus). Her spiritual counterpart
at Thyatira lured God's "servants" by pretended utterances
of inspiration to the same libertinism, fornication, and
eating of idol-meats, as the Balaamites and Nicolaitanes
(@Re
2:6,14,15). By a false spiritualism these seducers led
their victims into the grossest carnality, as though
things done in the flesh were outside the true man, and
were, therefore, indifferent. "The deeper the Church
penetrated into heathenism, the more she herself became
heathenish; this prepares us for the expressions 'harlot'
and 'Babylon,' applied to her afterwards" [AUBERLEN].
to teach and to seduce--The three oldest
manuscripts read, "and she teaches and seduces," or
"deceives." "Thyatira was just the reverse of Ephesus.
There, much zeal for orthodoxy, but little love; here,
activity of faith and love, but insufficient zeal for
godly discipline and doctrine, a patience of error even
where there was not a participation in it" [TRENCH].
21. space--Greek,
"time."
of her fornication . . . she repented not--The
three oldest manuscripts read, "and she willeth not
to repent of (literally, 'out of,' that is, so as
to come out of) her fornication." Here there
is a transition from literal to spiritual
fornication, as appears from @Re
2:22. The idea arose from Jehovah's covenant relation
to the Old Testament Church being regarded as a marriage,
any transgression against which was, therefore,
harlotry, fornication, or
adultery.
22. Behold--calling
attention to her awful doom to come.
I will--Greek present, "I cast her."
a bed--The place of her sin shall be the
place of her punishment. The bed of her sin shall be her
bed of sickness and anguish. Perhaps a pestilence was
about to be sent. Or the bed of the grave, and of the hell
beyond, where the worm dieth not.
them that commit adultery with her--spiritually;
including both the eating of idol-meats and
fornication. "With her," in the Greek, implies
participation with her in her adulteries, namely,
by suffering her (@Re
2:20), or letting her alone, and so
virtually encouraging her. Her punishment is distinct from
theirs; she is to be cast into a bed, and her
children to be killed; while those who make
themselves partakers of her sin by tolerating her, are to
be cast into great tribulation.
except they repent--Greek aorist,
"repent" at once; shall have repented by the time
limited in My purpose.
their deeds--Two of the oldest manuscripts
and most ancient versions read "her." Thus, God's true
servants, who by connivance, are incurring the guilt of
her deeds, are distinguished from her. One oldest
manuscript, ANDREAS,
and CYPRIAN,
support "their."
23. her children--(@Isa
57:3 Eze 23:45,47). Her proper adherents; not those
who suffer her, but those who are begotten of her.
A distinct class from the last in @Re
2:22 (compare Note, see on Re 2:22), whose sin
was less direct, being that only of connivance.
kill . . . with death--Compare the disaster
that overtook the literal Jezebel's votaries of Baal, and
Ahab's sons, @1Ki
18:40 2Ki 10:6,7,24,25. Kill with death is a
Hebraism for slay with most sure and awful death;
so "dying thou shalt die" (@Ge
2:17). Not "die the common death of men" (@Nu
16:29).
all the churches shall know--implying that
these addresses are designed for the catholic Church of
all ages and places. So palpably shall God's hand be seen
in the judgment on Thyatira, that the whole Church shall
recognize it as God's doing.
I am he--the "I" is strongly emphatical:
"that it is I am He who," &c.
searcheth . . . hearts--God's peculiar
attribute is given to Christ. The "reins" are the seat of
the desires; the "heart," that of the thoughts. The
Greek for "searcheth" expresses an accurate following
up of all tracks and windings.
unto every one of you--literally, "unto you,
to each."
according to your works--to be judged not
according to the mere act as it appears to man, but with
reference to the motive, faith and love
being the only motives which God recognizes as sound.
24. you . . . and . . . the
rest--The three oldest manuscripts omit "and";
translate then, "Unto you, the rest."
as many as have not--not only do not hold,
but are free from contact with.
and which--The oldest manuscripts omit "and";
translate, "whosoever."
the depths--These false prophets boasted
peculiarly of their knowledge of mysteries and
the deep things of God; pretensions subsequently
expressed by their arrogant title, Gnostics ("full
of knowledge"). The Spirit here declares their so-called
"depths," (namely, of knowledge of divine things) to be
really "depths of Satan"; just as in @Re
2:9, He says, instead of "the synagogue of God,"
"the synagogue of Satan." HENGSTENBERG
thinks the teachers themselves professed to fathom the
depths of Satan, giving loose rein to fleshly lusts,
without being hurt thereby. They who thus think to fight
Satan with his own weapons always find him more than a
match for them. The words, "as they speak," that is, "as
they call them," coming after not only "depths," but
"depths of Satan," seem to favor this latter view;
otherwise I should prefer the former, in which case, "as
they speak," or "call them," must refer to "depths" only,
not also "depths of Satan." The original sin of
Adam was a desire to know EVIL
as well as good, so in HENGSTENBERG'S
view, those who professed to know "the depths of Satan."
It is the prerogative of God alone to know evil fully,
without being hurt or defiled by it.
I will put--Two oldest manuscripts have "I
put," or "cast." One oldest manuscript reads as English
Version.
none other burden--save abstinence from, and
protestation against, these abominations; no "depths"
beyond your reach, such as they teach, no new doctrine,
but the old faith and rule of practice once for all
delivered to the saints. Exaggerating and perfecting
Paul's doctrine of grace without the law as the source of
justification and sanctification, these false prophets
rejected the law as a rule of life, as though it were an
intolerable "burden." But it is a "light" burden. In @Ac
15:28,29, the very term "burden," as here, is used of
abstinence from fornication and idol-meats; to this the
Lord here refers.
25. that which ye have already--(@Jude
1:3, end).
hold fast--do not let go from your grasp,
however false teachers may wish to wrest it from you.
till I come--when your conflict with evil
will be at an end. The Greek implies uncertainty
as to when He shall come.
26. And--implying the close
connection of the promise to the conqueror that follows,
with the preceding exhortation, @Re
2:25.
and keepeth--Greek, "and he that
keepeth." Compare the same word in the passage already
alluded to by the Lord, @Ac
15:28,29, end.
my works--in contrast to "her (English
Version, 'their') works" (@Re
2:22). The works which I command and which are the
fruit of My Spirit.
unto the end--(@Mt
24:13). The image is perhaps from the race, wherein it
is not enough to enter the lists, but the runner must
persevere to the end.
give power--Greek, "authority."
over the nations--at Christ's coming the
saints shall possess the kingdom "under the whole heaven";
therefore over this earth; compare @Lu
19:17, "have thou authority [the same word
as here] over ten cities."
27. From @Ps
2:8,9.
rule--literally, "rule as a shepherd." In @Ps
2:9 it is, "Thou shalt break them with a rod of
iron." The Septuagint, pointing the Hebrew
word differently, read as Revelation here. The English
Version of @Ps
2:9 is doubtless right, as the parallel word, "dash in
pieces," proves. But the Spirit in this case sanctions the
additional thought as true, that the Lord shall
mingle mercy to some, with judgment on others; beginning
by destroying His Antichristian foes, He shall reign in
love over the rest. "Christ shall rule them with a
scepter of iron, to make them capable of being ruled
with a scepter of gold; severity first, that grace may
come after" (TRENCH,
who thinks we ought to translate "SCEPTER"
for "rod," as in @Heb
1:8). "Shepherd" is used in @Jer
6:3, of hostile rulers; so also in @Zec
11:16. As severity here is the primary thought, "rule
as a shepherd" seems to me to be used thus: He who would
have shepherded them with a pastoral rod, shall, because
of their hardened unbelief, shepherd them with a rod of
iron.
shall they be broken--So one oldest
manuscript, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic Versions
read. But two oldest manuscripts, read, "as the vessels of
a potter are broken to shivers." A potter's
vessel dashed to pieces, because of its failing to
answer the design of the maker, is the image to depict
God's sovereign power to give reprobates to destruction,
not by caprice, but in the exercise of His righteous
judgment. The saints shall be in Christ's victorious
"armies" when He shall inflict the last decisive blow, and
afterwards shall reign with Him. Having by faith "overcome
the world," they shall also rule the world.
even as I--"as I also have received of
(from) My Father," namely, in @Ps
2:7-9. Jesus had refused to receive the kingdom
without the cross at Satan's hands; He would receive it
from none but the Father, who had appointed the cross as
the path to the crown. As the Father has given the
authority to Me over the heathen and uttermost parts of
the earth, so I impart a share of it to My victorious
disciple.
28. the morning star--that
is, I will give unto him Myself, who am "the
morning star" (@Re
22:16); so that reflecting My perfect brightness, he
shall shine like Me, the morning star, and share My
kingly glory (of which a star is the symbol, @Nu
21:17 Mt 2:2). Compare @Re
2:17, "I will give him . . . the hidden manna," that
is, Myself, who am that manna (@Joh
6:31-33).
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