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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 8
@Re
8:1-13. SEVENTH
SEAL. PREPARATION
FOR THE SEVEN
TRUMPETS. THE
FIRST FOUR
AND THE CONSEQUENT
PLAGUES.
1. was--Greek, "came
to pass"; "began to be."
silence in heaven about . . . half an hour--The
last seal having been broken open, the book of God's
eternal plan of redemption is opened for the Lamb to read
to the blessed ones in heaven. The half hour's silence
contrasts with the previous jubilant songs of the great
multitude, taken up by the angels (@Re
7:9-11). It is the solemn introduction to the
employments and enjoyments of the eternal Sabbath-rest of
the people of God, commencing with the Lamb's reading the
book heretofore sealed up, and which we cannot know till
then. In @Re
10:4, similarly at the eve of the sounding of the
seventh trumpet, when the seven thunders uttered their
voices, John is forbidden to write them. The seventh
trumpet (@Re
11:15-19) winds up God's vast plan of providence and
grace in redemption, just as the seventh seal brings it to
the same consummation. So also the seventh vial, @Re
16:17. Not that the seven seals, the seven trumpets,
and the seven vials, though parallel, are repetitions.
They each trace the course of divine action up to the
grand consummation in which they all meet, under a
different aspect. Thunders, lightnings, an earthquake,
and voices close the seven thunders and the seven
seals alike (compare @Re
8:5, with @Re
11:19). Compare at the seventh vial, the voices,
thunders, lightnings, and earthquake, @Re
16:18. The half-hour silence is the brief pause
GIVEN TO JOHN
between the preceding vision and the following one,
implying, on the one hand, the solemn introduction to the
eternal sabbatism which is to follow the seventh seal;
and, on the other, the silence which continued during the
incense-accompanied prayers which usher in the first of
the seven trumpets (@Re
8:3-5). In the Jewish temple, musical instruments and
singing resounded during the whole time of the offering of
the sacrifices, which formed the first part of the
service. But at the offering of incense, solemn silence
was kept ("My soul waiteth upon God," @Ps
62:1; "is silent," Margin; @Ps
65:1, Margin), the people praying secretly all
the time. The half-hour stillness implies, too, the
earnest adoring expectation with which the blessed spirits
and the angels await the succeeding unfolding of God's
judgments. A short space is implied; for even an
hour is so used (@Re
17:12 18:10,19).
2. the seven angels--Compare
the apocryphal Tobit 12:15, "I am Raphael, one of the
seven holy angels which present the prayers of the saints,
and which go in and out before the glory of the Holy One."
Compare @Lu
1:19, "I am Gabriel, that stand in the presence of
God."
stood--Greek, "stand."
seven trumpets--These come in during the time
while the martyrs rest until their fellow servants
also, that should be killed as they were, should be
fulfilled; for it is the inhabiters of the earth
on whom the judgments fall, on whom also the martyrs
prayed that they should fall (@Re
6:10). All the ungodly, and not merely some one
portion of them, are meant, all the opponents and
obstacles in the way of the kingdom of Christ and His
saints, as is proved by @Re
11:15,18, end, at the close of the seven trumpets. The
Revelation becomes more special only as it advances
farther (@Re
13:1-18 16:10 17:18). By the seven trumpets the world
kingdoms are overturned to make way for Christ's universal
kingdom. The first four are connected together; and the
last three, which alone have Woe, woe, woe (@Re
8:7-13).
3. another angel--not
Christ, as many think; for He, in Revelation, is always
designated by one of His proper titles; though, doubtless,
He is the only true High Priest, the Angel of the
Covenant, standing before the golden altar of incense, and
there, as Mediator, offering up His people's prayers,
rendered acceptable before God through the incense of His
merit. Here the angel acts merely as a ministering
spirit (@Heb
1:4), just as the twenty-four elders have vials
full of odors, or incense, which are the prayers of
saints (@Re
5:8), and which they present before the Lamb. How
precisely their ministry, in perfuming the prayers of the
saints and offering them on the altar of incense, is
exercised, we know not, but we do know they are not to be
prayed TO. If
we send an offering of tribute to the king, the king's
messenger is not allowed to appropriate what is due to the
king alone.
there was given unto him--The angel does not
provide the incense; it is given to him by Christ,
whose meritorious obedience and death are the incense,
rendering the saints' prayers well pleasing to God. It is
not the saints who give the angel the incense; nor are
their prayers identified with the incense; nor do they
offer their prayers to him. Christ alone is the Mediator
through whom, and to whom, prayer is to be offered.
offer it with the prayers--rather as
Greek, "give it TO
the prayers," so rendering them efficacious as a
sweet-smelling savor to God. Christ's merits alone can
thus incense our prayers, though the angelic
ministry be employed to attach this incense to the
prayers. The saints' praying on earth, and the angel's
incensing in heaven, are simultaneous.
all saints--The prayers both of the saints in
the heavenly rest, and of those militant on earth. The
martyrs' cry is the foremost, and brings down the ensuing
judgments.
golden altar--antitype to the earthly.
4. the smoke . . . which
came with the prayers . . . ascended up--rather,
"the smoke of the incense FOR
(or 'given TO':
'given' being understood from @Re
8:3) the prayers of the saints ascended up, out of the
angel's hand, in the presence of Gods" The angel merely
burns the incense given him by Christ the High Priest, so
that its smoke blends with the ascending prayers of the
saints. The saints themselves are priests; and the angels
in this priestly ministration are but their fellow
servants (@Re
19:10).
5. cast it into the earth--that
is, unto the earth: the hot coals off the altar
cast on the earth, symbolize God's fiery judgments about
to descend on the Church's foes in answer to the saints'
incense-perfumed prayers which have just ascended before
God, and those of the martyrs. How marvellous the power of
the saints' prayers!
there were--"there took place," or "ensued."
voices, and thunderings, and lightnings--B
places the "voices" after "thunderings." A places it after
"lightnings."
6. sound--blow the
trumpets.
7. The common feature of
the first four trumpets is, the judgments under them
affect natural objects, the accessories of life,
the earth, trees, grass, the sea, rivers, fountains, the
light of the sun, moon, and stars. The last three, the
woe-trumpets (@Re
8:13), affect men's life with pain, death, and hell.
The language is evidently drawn from the plagues of Egypt,
five or six out of the ten exactly corresponding: the
hail, the fire (@Ex
9:24), the WATER
turned to blood (@Ex
7:19), the darkness (@Ex
10:21), the locusts (@Ex
10:12), and perhaps the death (@Re
9:18). Judicial retribution in kind characterizes the
inflictions of the first four, those elements which had
been abused punishing their abusers.
mingled with--A, B, and Vulgate read,
Greek, ". . . IN
blood." So in the case of the second and third vials (@Re
16:3,4).
upon the earth--Greek, "unto
the earth." A, B, Vulgate, and Syriac add,
"And the third of the earth was burnt up." So under the
third trumpet, the third of the rivers is affected:
also, under the sixth trumpet, the third part of
men are killed. In @Zec
13:8,9 this tripartite division appears, but the
proportions reversed, two parts killed, only a third
preserved. Here, vice versa, two-thirds escape, one-third
is smitten. The fire was the predominant element.
all green grass--no longer a third, but
all is burnt up.
8. as it were--not
literally a mountain: a mountain-like burning mass. There
is a plain allusion to @Jer
51:25 Am 7:4.
third part of the sea became blood--In the
parallel second vial, the whole sea (not merely
a third) becomes blood. The overthrow of
Jericho, the type of the Antichristian Babylon, after
which Israel, under Joshua (the same name as Jesus),
victoriously took possession of Canaan, the type of
Christ's and His people's kingdom, is perhaps alluded to
in the SEVEN
trumpets, which end in the overthrow of all
Christ's foes, and the setting up of His kingdom. On the
seventh day, at the seventh time, when the
seven priests blew the seven ram's horn
trumpets, the people shouted, and the walls fell flat: and
then ensued the blood-shedding of the foe. A
mountain-like fiery mass would not naturally change water
into blood; nor would the third part of ships be
thereby destroyed.
9. The symbolical
interpreters take the ships here to be churches.
For the Greek here for ships is not the common one,
but that used in the Gospels of the apostolic vessel in
which Christ taught: and the first churches were in the
shape of an inverted ship: and the Greek for
destroyed is also used of heretical corruptings
(@1Ti
6:5).
10. a lamp--a
torch.
11. The symbolizers
interpret the star fallen from heaven as a chief
minister (ARIUS,
according to BULLINGER,
BENGEL, and
others; or some future false teacher, if, as is more
likely, the event be still future) falling from his high
place in the Church, and instead of shining with heavenly
light as a star, becoming a torch lit with earthly
fire and smouldering with smoke. And "wormwood," though
medicinal in some cases, if used as ordinary water would
not only be disagreeable to the taste, but also fatal to
life: so "heretical wormwood changes the sweet Siloas of
Scripture into deadly Marahs" [WORDSWORTH].
Contrast the converse change of bitter Marah water into
sweet, @Ex
15:23. ALFORD
gives as an illustration in a physical point of view, the
conversion of water into firewater or ardent
spirits, which may yet go on to destroy even as many as a
third of the ungodly in the latter days.
12. third part--not a
total obscuration as in the sixth seal (@Re
6:12,13). This partial obscuration, therefore,
comes between the prayers of the martyrs under the fifth
seal, and the last overwhelming judgments on the ungodly
under the sixth seal, at the eve of Christ's coming.
the night likewise--withdrew a third part of
the light which the bright Eastern moon and stars
ordinarily afford.
13. an angel--A, B,
Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic read for "angel,"
which is supported by none of the oldest manuscripts, "an
eagle": the symbol of judgment descending fatally from on
high; the king of birds pouncing on the prey. Compare this
fourth trumpet and the flying eagle with the fourth
seal introduced by the fourth living creature, "like a
flying eagle," @Re
4:7 6:7,8: the aspect of Jesus as presented by the
fourth Evangelist. John is compared in the cherubim
(according to the primitive interpretation) to a flying
eagle: Christ's divine majesty in this similitude
is set forth in the Gospel according to John, His
judicial visitations in the Revelation of John.
Contrast "another angel," or messenger, with "the
everlasting Gospel," @Re
14:6.
through the midst of heaven--Greek,
"in the mid-heaven," that is, in the part of the sky where
the sun reaches the meridian: in such a position as
that the eagle is an object conspicuous to all.
the inhabiters of the earth--the ungodly, the
"men of the world," whose "portion is in this life," upon
whom the martyrs had prayed that their blood might be
avenged (@Re
6:10). Not that they sought personal revenge, but
their zeal was for the honor of God against the foes of
God and His Church.
the other--Greek, "the remaining
voices."
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