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THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 9
@Re
9:1-21. THE
FIFTH TRUMPET:
THE FALLEN
STAR OPENS
THE ABYSS
WHENCE ISSUE
LOCUSTS. THE
SIXTH TRUMPET.
FOUR ANGELS
AT THE EUPHRATES
LOOSED.
1. The last three trumpets
of the seven are called, from @Re
8:13, the woe-trumpets.
fall--rather as Greek, "fallen." When
John saw it, it was not in the act of falling, but
had fallen already. This is a connecting link of
this fifth trumpet with @Re
12:8,9,12, "Woe to the inhabiters of the earth,
for the devil is come down," &c. Compare @Isa
14:12, "How art thou fallen from heaven,
Lucifer, son of the morning!"
the bottomless pit--Greek, "the pit of
the abyss"; the orifice of the hell where Satan and
his demons dwell.
3. upon--Greek,
"unto," or "into."
as the scorpions of the earth--as contrasted
with the "locusts" which come up from hell, and are
not "of the earth."
have power--namely, to sting.
4. not hurt the grass . . .
neither . . . green thing . . . neither . . . tree--the
food on which they ordinarily prey. Therefore, not natural
and ordinary locusts. Their natural instinct is
supernaturally restrained to mark the judgment as
altogether divine.
those men which--Greek, "the
men whosoever."
in, &c.--Greek, "upon their
forehead." Thus this fifth trumpet is proved to follow the
sealing in @Re
7:1-8, under the sixth seal. None of the saints are
hurt by these locusts, which is not true of the saints in
Mohammed's attack, who is supposed by many to be meant by
the locusts; for many true believers fell in the
Mohammedan invasions of Christendom.
5. they . . . they--The
subject changes: the first "they" is the locusts;
the second is the unsealed.
five months--the ordinary time in the year
during which locusts continue their ravages.
their torment--the torment of the sufferers.
This fifth verse and @Re
9:6 cannot refer to an invading army. For an army
would kill, and not merely
torment.
6. shall desire--Greek,
"eagerly desire"; set their mind on.
shall flee--So B, Vulgate, Syriac, and
Coptic read. But A and Aleph read, "fleeth,"
namely continually. In @Re
6:16, which is at a later stage of God's judgments,
the ungodly seek annihilation, not from the torment of
their suffering, but from fear of the face of the Lamb
before whom they have to stand.
7. prepared unto battle--Greek,
"made ready unto war." Compare Note, see on Joe
2:4, where the resemblance of locusts to horses is traced:
the plates of a horse armed for battle are an image on a
larger scale of the outer shell of the locust.
crowns--(@Na
3:17). ELLIOTT
explains this of the turbans of Mohammedans. But
how could turbans be "like gold?" ALFORD
understands it of the head of the locusts actually ending
in a crown-shaped fillet which resembled gold in its
material.
as the faces of men--The "as" seems to imply
the locusts here do not mean men. At the same time
they are not natural locusts, for these do not sting
men (@Re
9:5). They must be supernatural.
8. hair of women--long and
flowing. An Arabic proverb compares the antlers of locusts
to the hair of girls. EWALD
in ALFORD
understands the allusion to be to the hair on the legs or
bodies of the locusts: compare "rough caterpillars," @Jer
51:27.
as the teeth of lions--(@Joe
1:6, as to locusts).
9. as it were breastplates of
iron--not such as forms the thorax of the natural
locust.
as . . . chariots--(@Joe
2:5-7).
battle--Greek, "war."
10. tails like unto scorpions--like
unto the tails of scorpions.
and there were stings--There is no oldest
manuscript for this reading. A, B, Aleph, Syriac,
and Coptic read, "and (they have) stings: and in
their tails (is) their power (literally, 'authority':
authorized power) to hurt."
11. And--so Syriac.
But A, B, and Aleph, omit "and."
had--Greek, "have."
a king . . . which is the angel--English
Version, agreeing with A, Aleph, reads the (Greek)
article before "angel," in which reading we must
translate, "They have as king over them the angel,"
&c. Satan (compare @Re
9:1). Omitting the article with B, we must translate,
"They have as king an angel," &c.: one of the chief
demons under Satan: I prefer from @Re
9:1, the former.
bottomless pit--Greek, "abyss."
Abaddon--that is, perdition or
destruction (@Job
26:6 Pr 27:20). The locusts are supernatural
instruments in the hands of Satan to torment, and yet not
kill, the ungodly, under this fifth trumpet. Just as in
the case of godly Job, Satan was allowed to torment with
elephantiasis, but not to touch his life. In @Re
9:20, these two woe-trumpets are expressly called
"plagues." ANDREAS OF
CĘSAREA,
A.D. 500,
held, in his Commentary on Revelation, that the
locusts mean evil spirits again permitted to come
forth on earth and afflict men with various plagues.
12. Greek, "The
one woe."
hereafter--Greek, "after these
things." I agree with ALFORD
and DE BURGH,
that these locusts from the abyss refer to
judgments about to fall on the ungodly immediately before
Christ's second advent. None of the interpretations which
regard them as past, are satisfactory. @Joe
1:2-7 2:1-11, is strictly parallel and expressly
refers (@Joe
2:11) to THE DAY OF THE
LORD GREAT AND VERY TERRIBLE:
@Joe
2:10 gives the portents accompanying the day of the
Lord's coming, the earth quaking, the heavens
trembling, the sun, moon, and stars, withdrawing their
shining: @Joe
2:18,31,32, also point to the immediately succeeding
deliverance of Jerusalem: compare also, the previous last
conflict in the valley of Jehoshaphat, and the dwelling of
God thenceforth in Zion, blessing Judah. DE
BURGH
confines the locust judgment to the Israelite land,
even as the sealed in @Re
7:1-8 are Israelites: not that there are not others
sealed as elect in the earth; but that, the
judgment being confined to Palestine, the sealed of
Israel alone needed to be expressly excepted from
the visitation. Therefore, he translates throughout, "the
land" (that is, of Israel and Judah), instead of "the
earth." I incline to agree with him.
13. a voice--literally, "one
voice."
from--Greek, "out of."
the four horns--A, Vulgate (Amiatinus
manuscript), Coptic, and Syriac omit "four."
B and CYPRIAN
support it. The four horns together gave forth
their voice, not diverse, but one. God's revelation
(for example, the Gospel), though in its aspects fourfold
(four expressing world-wide extension:
whence four is the number of the Evangelists),
still has but one and the same voice. However, from the
parallelism of this sixth trumpet to the fifth seal (@Re
6:9,10), the martyrs' cry for the avenging of their
blood from the altar reaching its consummation under the
sixth seal and sixth trumpet, I prefer understanding this
cry from the four corners of the altar to refer to
the saints' prayerful cry from the four quarters of the
world, incensed by the angel, and ascending to God
from the golden altar of incense, and bringing down in
consequence fiery judgments. Aleph omits the whole
clause, "one from the four horns."
14. in, &c.--Greek,
"epi to potamo"; "on," or "at the great river."
Euphrates--(Compare @Re
16:12). The river whereat Babylon, the ancient foe of
God's people was situated. Again, whether from the literal
region of the Euphrates, or from the spiritual Babylon (the
apostate Church, especially ROME),
four angelic ministers of God's judgments shall go forth,
assembling an army of horsemen throughout the four
quarters of the earth, to slay a third of men, the brunt
of the visitation shall be on Palestine.
15. were--"which had been
prepared" [TREGELLES
rightly].
for an hour, and a day, and a month, and a year--rather
as Greek, "for (that is, against)
THE hour, and day,
and month, and year," namely, appointed by God. The
Greek article (teen), put once only before all
the periods, implies that the hour in the day, and the day
in the month, and the month in the year, and the year
itself, had been definitely fixed by God. The article
would have been omitted had a sum-total of periods been
specified, namely, three hundred ninety-one years and one
month (the period from A.D.
1281, when the Turks first conquered the Christians, to
1672, their last conquest of them, since which last date
their empire has declined).
slay--not merely to "hurt" (@Re
9:10), as in the fifth trumpet.
third part--(See on Re 8:7-12).
of men--namely, of earthy men, @Re
8:13, "inhabiters of the earth," as distinguished from
God's sealed people (of which the sealed of Israel, @Re
7:1-8, form the nucleus).
16. Compare with these two
hundred million, @Ps
68:17 Da 7:10. The hosts here are evidently, from
their numbers and their appearance (@Re
9:17), not merely human hosts, but probably
infernal, though constrained to work out God's will
(compare @Re
9:1,2).
and I heard--A, B, Aleph, Vulgate,
Syriac, Coptic, and CYPRIAN
omit "and."
17. thus--as follows.
of fire--the fiery color of the
breastplates answering to the fire which issued
out of their mouths.
of jacinth--literally, "of hyacinth color,"
the hyacinth of the ancients answering to our dark blue
iris: thus, their dark, dull-colored
breastplates correspond to the smoke out of their
mouths.
brimstone--sulphur-colored: answering
to the brimstone or sulphur
out of their mouths.
18. By these three--A, B.
C, and Aleph read (apo for kupo),
"From"; implying the direction whence the slaughter
came; not direct instrumentality as "by" implies. A, B, C,
Aleph also add "plagues" after "three." English
Version reading, which omits it, is not well
supported.
by the fire--Greek, "owing to
the fire," literally, "out of."
19. their--A, B, C and
Aleph read, "the power of the horses."
in their mouth--whence issued the
fire, smoke, and brimstone (@Re
9:17). Many interpreters understand the horsemen
to refer to the myriads of Turkish cavalry arrayed in
scarlet, blue, and yellow (fire, hyacinth, and
brimstone), the lion-headed horses denoting
their invincible courage, and the fire and
brimstone out of their mouths, the gunpowder and
artillery introduced into Europe about this time, and
employed by the Turks; the tails, like serpents, having a
venomous sting, the false religion of Mohammed supplanting
Christianity, or, as ELLIOTT
thinks, the Turkish pachas' horse tails, worn as a symbol
of authority. (!) All this is very doubtful. Considering
the parallelism of this sixth trumpet to the sixth seal,
the likelihood is that events are intended immediately
preceding the Lord's coming. "The false prophet" (as @Isa
9:15 proves), or second beast, having the horns of a
lamb, but speaking as the dragon, who supports by
lying miracles the final Antichrist, seems to me to be
intended. Mohammed, doubtless, is a forerunner of him, but
not the exhaustive fulfiller of the prophecy here: Satan
will, probably, towards the end, bring out all the powers
of hell for the last conflict (see on Re 9:20, on
"devils"; compare @Re
9:1,2,17,18).
with them--with the serpent heads and their
venomous fangs.
20. the rest of the men--that
is, the ungodly.
yet--So A, Vulgate, Syriac, and
Coptic. B and Aleph read, "did not even
repent of," namely, so as to give up "the works," &c. Like
Pharaoh hardening his heart against repentance
notwithstanding the plagues.
of their hands--(@De
31:29). Especially the idols made by their hands.
Compare @Re
13:14,15, "the image of the beast" @Re
19:20.
that they should not--So B reads. But A, C,
and Aleph read "that they shall not": implying a
prophecy of certainty that it shall be so.
devils--Greek, "demons" which lurk
beneath the idols which idolaters worship.
21. sorceries--witchcrafts
by means of drugs (so the Greek). One of the
fruits of the unrenewed flesh: the sin of the heathen:
about to be repeated by apostate Christians in the last
days, @Re
22:15, "sorcerers." The heathen who shall have
rejected the proffered Gospel and clung to their fleshly
lusts, and apostate Christians who shall have relapsed
into the same shall share the same terrible judgments. The
worship of images was established in the East in
A.D. 842.
fornication--singular: whereas the other sins
are in the plural. Other sins are perpetrated at
intervals: those lacking purity of heart indulge in one
perpetual fornication [BENGEL].
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