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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 6
@Re
6:1-17. THE
OPENING OF THE
FIRST SIX
OF THE SEVEN
SEALS.
Compare Note, see on Re
5:1. Many (MEDE,
FLEMING, NEWTON,
&c.). hold that all these seals have been fulfilled, the
sixth having been so by the overthrow of paganism and
establishment of Christianity under Constantine's edict,
A.D. 312.
There can, however, be no doubt that at least the sixth
seal is future, and is to be at the coming again of
Christ. The great objection to supposing the seals to be
finally and exhaustively fulfilled (though, probably,
particular events may be partial fulfilments typical of
the final and fullest one), is that, if so, they ought to
furnish (as the destruction of Jerusalem, according to
Christ's prophecy, does) a strong external evidence of
Revelation. But it is clear they cannot be used for this,
as hardly any two interpreters of this school are agreed
on what events constitute the fulfilment of each seal.
Probably not isolated facts, but classes of events
preparing the way for Christ's coming kingdom, are
intended by the opening of the seals. The four living
creatures severally cry at the opening of the first four
seals, "Come," which fact marks the division of the
seven, as often occurs in this sacred number, into
four and three.
1. one of the seals--The
oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, Vulgate, and Syriac
read, "one of the seven seals."
noise--The three oldest manuscripts read this
in the nominative or dative, not the genitive, as
English Version, "I heard one from among the four
living creatures saying, as (it were) the voice
(or, 'as with the voice') of thunder." The first
living creature was like a lion (@Re
4:7): his voice is in consonance. Implying the
lion-like boldness with which, in the successive great
revivals, the faithful have testified for Christ,
and especially a little before His coming shall testify.
Or, rather, their earnestness in praying for Christ's
coming.
Come and see--One oldest manuscript, B, has
"And see." But A, C, and Vulgate reject it. ALFORD
rightly objects to English Version reading:
"Whither was John to come? Separated as he was by the
glassy sea from the throne, was he to cross it?" Contrast
the form of expression, @Re
10:8. It is much more likely to be the cry of the
redeemed to the Redeemer, "Come" and deliver the groaning
creature from the bondage of corruption. Thus, @Re
6:2 is an answer to the cry, went (literally,
"came") forth corresponding to "Come." "Come," says GROTIUS,
is the living creature's address to John, calling his
earnest attention. But it seems hard to see how "Come"
by itself can mean this. Compare the only other places in
Revelation where it is used, @Re
4:1 22:17. If the four living creatures represent the
four Gospels, the "Come" will be their invitation to
everyone (for it is not written that they addressed
John) to accept Christ's salvation while there
is time, as the opening of the seals marks a progressive
step towards the end (compare @Re
22:17). Judgments are foretold as accompanying the
preaching of the Gospel as a witness to all nations (@Re
14:6-11 Mt 24:6-14). Thus the invitation, "Come,"
here, is aptly parallel to @Mt
24:14. The opening of the first four seals is followed
by judgments preparatory for His coming. At the opening of
the fifth seal, the martyrs above express the same (@Re
6:9,10; compare @Zec
1:10). At the opening of the sixth seal, the Lord's
coming is ushered in with terrors to the ungodly. At the
seventh, the consummation is fully attained (@Re
11:15).
2. Evidently Christ,
whether in person, or by His angel, preparatory to His
coming again, as appears from @Re
19:11,12.
bow--(@Ps
45:4,5).
crown--Greek, "stephanos," the
garland or wreath of a conqueror, which is also
implied by His white horse, white being the emblem
of victory. In @Re
19:11,12 the last step in His victorious progress is
represented; accordingly there He wears many diadems
(Greek, "diademata"; not merely Greek,
"stephanoi," "crowns" or "wreaths"), and is
personally attended by the hosts of heaven. Compare @Zec
1:7-17 6:1-8; especially @Re
6:10 below, with @Zec
1:12; also compare the colors of the four horses.
and to conquer--that is, so as to gain a
lasting victory. All four seals usher in judgments
on the earth, as the power which opposes the reign of
Himself and His Church. This, rather than the work of
conversion and conviction, is primarily meant, though
doubtless, secondarily, the elect will be gathered out
through His word and His judgments.
3. and see--omitted in the
three oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, and
Vulgate.
4. red--the color of
blood. The color of the horse in each case answers to
the mission of the rider. Compare @Mt
10:24-36, "Think not I am come to send peace on
earth; I came not to send peace, but a sword."
The white horse of Christ's bloodless victories is
soon followed, through man's perversion of the Gospel, by
the red horse of bloodshed; but this is overruled
to the clearing away of the obstacles to Christ's coming
kingdom. The patient ox is the emblem of the second
living creature who, at the opening of this seal,
saith, "Come." The saints amidst judgments on the earth in
patience "endure to the end."
that they should kill--The Greek is
indicative future, "that they may, as they also shall,
kill one another."
5. Come and see--The two
oldest manuscripts, A, C, and Vulgate omit "and
see." B retains the words.
black--implying sadness and want.
had--Greek, "having."
a pair of balances--the symbol of scarcity of
provisions, the bread being doled out by weight.
6. a voice--Two oldest
manuscripts, A, C, read, "as it were a voice." B
reads as English Version. The voice is heard "in
the midst of the four living creatures" (as Jehovah in the
Shekinah-cloud manifested His presence between the
cherubim); because it is only for the sake of, and in
connection with, His redeemed, that God mitigates His
judgments on the earth.
A measure--"A chænix." While making
food scarce, do not make it so much so that a chænix
(about a day's provision of wheat, variously estimated at
two or three pints) shall not be obtainable "for a penny"
(denarius, about twenty cents, probably the day's
wages of a laborer). Famine generally follows the
sword. Ordinarily, from sixteen to twenty measures
were given for a denarius. The sword, famine, noisome
beasts, and the pestilence, are God's four
judgments on the earth. A spiritual famine, too, may be
included in the judgment. The "Come," in the case of this
third seal, is said by the third of the four living
creatures, whose likeness is a man indicative of
sympathy and human compassion for the sufferers. God in it
tempers judgment with mercy. Compare @Mt
24:7, which indicates the very calamities foretold in
these seals, nation rising against nation (the
sword), famines, pestilences (@Re
6:8), and earthquakes (@Re
6:12).
three measures of barley for a penny--the
cheaper and less nutritious grain, bought by the laborer
who could not buy enough wheat for his family with his
day's wages, a denarius, and, therefore, buys barley.
see thou hurt not the oil, and the wine--the
luxuries of life, rather than necessaries; the oil and
wine were to be spared for the refreshment of the
sufferers.
7. and see--supported by B;
omitted by A, C, and Vulgate. The fourth living
creature, who was "like a flying eagle," introduces
this seal; implying high-soaring intelligence, and
judgment descending from on high fatally on the ungodly,
as the king of birds on his prey.
8. pale--"livid" [ALFORD].
Death--personified.
Hell--Hades personified.
unto them--Death and Hades. So
A, C read. But B and Vulgate read, "to him."
fourth part of the earth--answering to the
first four seals; his portion as one of the four, being a
fourth part.
death--pestilence; compare @Eze
14:21 with the four judgments here, the sword,
famine, pestilence, and wild beasts; the
famine the consequence of the sword; pestilence,
that of famine; and beasts multiplying by
the consequent depopulation.
with the beasts--Greek, "by"; more
direct agency. These four seals are marked off from the
three last, by the four living creatures introducing them
with "Come." The calamities indicated are not restricted
to one time, but extend through the whole period of Church
history to the coming of Christ, before which last great
and terrible day of the Lord they shall reach highest
aggravation. The first seal is the summary, Christ going
forth conquering till all enemies are subdued under
Him, with a view to which the judgments subsequently
specified accompany the preaching
of the Gospel for a witness to all nations.
9. The three last seals
relate to the invisible, as the first four to the visible
world; the fifth, to the martyrs who have died as
believers; the sixth, to those who have died, or who shall
be found at Christ's coming, unbelievers, namely, "the
kings . . . great men . . . bondman . . . freeman"; the
seventh, to the silence in heaven. The scene changes from
earth to heaven; so that interpretations which make these
three last consecutive to the first four seals, are very
doubtful.
I saw--in spirit. For souls are not naturally
visible.
under the altar--As the blood of sacrificial
victims slain on the altar was poured at the bottom of
the altar, so the souls of those sacrificed for
Christ's testimony are symbolically represented as
under the altar, in heaven; for the life or animal
soul is in the blood, and blood is often
represented as crying for vengeance (@Ge
4:10). The altar in heaven, antitypical to the altar
of sacrifice, is Christ crucified. As it is the altar that
sanctifies the gift, so it is Christ alone who makes our
obedience, and even our sacrifice of life for the truth,
acceptable to God. The sacrificial altar was not in the
sanctuary, but outside; so Christ's literal sacrifice and
the figurative sacrifice of the martyrs took place, not in
the heavenly sanctuary, but outside, here on earth. The
only altar in heaven is that antitypical to the temple
altar of incense. The blood of the martyrs cries from the
earth under Christ's cross, whereon they may be considered
virtually to have been sacrificed; their souls cry from
under the altar of incense, which is Christ in heaven, by
whom alone the incense of praise is accepted before God.
They are under Christ, in His immediate presence,
shut up unto Him in joyful eager expectancy until He shall
come to raise the sleeping dead. Compare the language of 2
Maccabees 7:36 as indicating Jewish opinion on the
subject. Our brethren who have now suffered a short pain
are dead under (Greek) God's covenant
of everlasting life.
testimony which they held--that is, which
they bore, as committed to them to bear. Compare @Re
12:17, "Have (same Greek as here) the
testimony of Jesus."
10. How long--Greek,
"Until when?" As in the parable the woman (symbol of the
Church) cries day and night to the unjust judge for
justice against her adversary who is always oppressing her
(compare below, @Re
12:10); so the elect (not only on earth, but under
Christ's covering, and in His presence in Paradise)
cry day and night to God, who will assuredly, in His
own time, avenge His and their cause, "though He bear
long with them." These passages need not be
restricted to some particular martyrdoms, but have
been, and are receiving, and shall receive partial
fulfilments, until their last exhaustive fulfilment before
Christ's coming. So as to the other events foretold here.
The glory even of those in Paradise will only be complete
when Christ's and the Church's foes are cast out, and the
earth will become Christ's kingdom at His coming to raise
the sleeping saints.
Lord--Greek, "Master"; implying that
He has them and their foes and all His creatures as
absolutely at His disposal, as a master has his slaves;
hence, in @Re
6:11, "fellow servants," or fellow slaves
follows.
holy--Greek, "the Holy one."
avenge--"exact vengeance for our blood."
on--Greek, "from them."
that dwell on the earth--the ungodly, of
earth, earthly, as distinguished from the Church, whose
home and heart are even now in heavenly places.
11. white robes--The three
oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, read, "A white robe was
given."
every one of--One oldest manuscript, B, omits
this. A and C read, "unto them, unto each," that is, unto
them severally. Though their joint cry for the riddance of
the earth from the ungodly is not yet granted, it is
intimated that it will be so in due time; meanwhile,
individually they receive the white robe, indicative
of light, joy, and triumphant victory over their foes;
even as the Captain of their salvation goes forth on a
white horse conquering and to conquer; also of
purity and sanctity through Christ. MAIMONIDES
says that the Jews used to array priests, when approved
of, in white robes; thus the sense is, they are
admitted among the blessed ones, who, as spotless priests,
minister unto God and the Lamb.
should--So C reads. But A and B, "shall
rest."
a little season--One oldest manuscript, B,
omits "little." A and C support it. Even if it be omitted,
is it to be inferred that the "season" is short as
compared with eternity? BENGEL
fancifully made a season (Greek, "chronus,"
the word here used) to be one thousand one hundred and
eleven one-ninth years, and a time (@Re
12:12,14, Greek, "kairos") to be a fifth
of a season, that is, two hundred and twenty-two
two-ninths years. The only distinction in the Greek
is, a season (Greek, "chronus") is a
sort of aggregate of times. Greek, "kairos,"
a specific time, and so of short duration. As to their
rest, compare @Re
14:13 (the same Greek, "anapauomai"); @Isa
57:2 Da 12:13.
until their . . . brethren . . . be fulfilled--in
number. Until their full number shall have been completed.
The number of the elect is definitely fixed: perhaps to
fill up that of the fallen angels. But this is mere
conjecture. The full blessedness and glory of all
the saints shall be simultaneous. The earlier shall not
anticipate the later saints. A and C read, "shall have
been accomplished"; B and Aleph read, "shall have
accomplished (their course)."
12. As @Re
6:4,6-8, the sword, famine, and pestilence, answer to
@Mt
24:6,7 Re 6:9,10, as to martyrdoms, answer to @Mt
24:9,10; so this passage, @Re
6:12,17, answers to @Mt
24:29,30, "the sun shall be darkened, and the moon
shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from
heaven; . . . then shall all the tribes of the earth
mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming"; imagery
describing the portents of the immediate coming of
the day of the Lord; but not the coming itself
until the elect are sealed, and the judgments invoked by
the martyrs descend on the earth, the sea, and the trees
(@Re
7:1-3).
and, lo--So A reads. But B and C omit "lo."
earthquake--Greek, "shaking" of the
heavens, the sea, and the dry land; the shaking of
these mutable things being the necessary preliminary to
the setting up of those things which cannot be shaken.
This is one of the catchwords [WORDSWORTH]
connecting the sixth seal with the sixth trumpet (@Re
11:13) and the seventh vial (@Re
16:17-21); also the seventh seal (@Re
8:5).
sackcloth--One kind, made of the "hair" of
Cilician goats, was called "cilicium," or Cilician cloth,
and was used for tents, &c. Paul, a Cilician, made such
tents (@Ac
18:3).
moon--A, B, C, and oldest versions read, "the
whole moon"; the full moon; not merely the crescent moon.
as blood--(@Joe
2:31).
13. stars . . . fell . . . as a
fig tree casteth her . . . figs--(@Isa
34:4 Na 3:12). The Church shall be then ripe for
glorification, the Antichristian world for destruction,
which shall be accompanied with mighty phenomena in
nature. As to the stars falling to the earth, Scripture
describes natural phenomena as they would appear to the
spectator, not in the language of scientific accuracy; and
yet, while thus adapting itself to ordinary men, it drops
hints which show that it anticipates the discoveries of
modern science.
14. departed--Greek,
"was separated from" its place; "was made to
depart." Not as ALFORD,
"parted asunder"; for, on the contrary, it was
rolled together as a scroll which had been open is
rolled up and laid aside. There is no "asunder one from
another" here in the Greek, as in @Ac
15:39, which ALFORD
copies.
mountain . . . moved out of . . . places--(@Ps
121:1, Margin; @Jer
3:23 4:24 Na 1:5). This total disruption shall be the
precursor of the new earth, just as the pre-Adamic
convulsions prepared it for its present occupants.
15. kings . . . hid themselves--Where
was now the spirit of those whom the world has so greatly
feared? [BENGEL].
great men--statesmen and high civil officers.
rich men . . . chief captains--The three
oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, transpose thus, "chief
captains . . . rich men."
mighty--The three oldest manuscripts, A, B,
and C read, "strong" physically (@Ps
33:16).
in--literally "into"; ran into, so as
to hide themselves in.
dens--"caves."
16. from the face--(@Ps
34:16). On the whole verse, compare @Ho
10:8 Lu 23:30.
17. Literally, "the day,
the great (day)," which can only mean the last great day.
After the Lord has exhausted all His ordinary judgments,
the sword, famine, pestilence, and wild beasts, and still
sinners are impenitent, the great day of the Lord itself'
shall come. @Mt
24:6-29 plainly forms a perfect parallelism to the six
seals, not only in the events, but also in the order of
their occurrence: @Mt
24:3, the first seal; @Mt
24:6, the second seal; @Mt
24:7, the third seal; @Mt
24:7, end, the fourth seal; @Mt
24:9, the fifth seal, the persecutions and abounding
iniquity under which, as well as consequent judgments
accompanied with gospel preaching to all nations as a
witness, are particularly detailed, @Mt
24:9-28; @Mt
24:29, the sixth seal.
to stand--to stand justified, and not
condemned before the Judge. Thus the sixth seal brings us
to the verge of the Lord's coming. The ungodly "tribes of
the earth" tremble at the signs of His immediate approach.
But before He actually inflicts the blow in person, "the
elect" must be "gathered "out.
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