| |
THE REVELATION
OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]
[15]
[16]
[17]
[18]
[19]
[20]
[21]
[22]
INTRODUCTION
AUTHENTICITY.--The
author calls himself John (@Re
1:1,4,9 2:8). JUSTIN
MARTYR [Dialogue
with Trypho, p. 308] (A.D.
139-161) quotes from the Apocalypse, as John the
apostle's work, the prophecy of the millennium of the
saints, to be followed by the general resurrection and
judgment. This testimony of JUSTIN
is referred to also by EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 4.18]. JUSTIN
MARTYR, in
the early part of the second century, held his controversy
with TRYPHO,
a learned Jew, at Ephesus, where John had been
living thirty or thirty-five years before: he says that
"the Revelation had been given to John, one of the twelve
apostles of Christ." MELITO,
bishop of Sardis (about A.D.
171), one of the seven churches addressed, a
successor, therefore, of one of the seven angels, is said
by EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical
History, 4.26] to have written treatises on the
Apocalypse of John. The testimony of the bishop of
Sardis is the more impartial, as Sardis is one of the
churches severely reproved (@Re
3:1). So also THEOPHILUS OF
ANTIOCH
(about A.D.
180), according to EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 4.26], quoted testimonies
from the Apocalypse of John. EUSEBIUS
says the same of Apollonius, who lived in Asia Minor in
the end of the second century. IRENÆUS
(about A.D.
180), a hearer of POLYCARP,
the disciple of John, and supposed by ARCHBISHOP
USHER to be
the angel of the Church of Smyrna, is most decided
again and again in quoting the Apocalypse as the work of
the apostle John [Against Heresies, 4.20.11;
4.21.3; 4.30.4; 5.36.1; 5.30.3; 5.35.2]. In [5.30.1],
alluding to the mystical number of the beast, six hundred
sixty-six (@Re
13:18), found in all old copies, he says, "We do not
hazard a confident theory as to the name of Antichrist;
for if it had been necessary that his name should be
proclaimed openly at the present time, it would have been
declared by him who saw the apocalyptic vision; for it
was seen at no long time back, but almost in our
generation, towards the end of Domitian's reign." In
his work Against Heresies, published ten years
after Polycarp's martyrdom, he quotes the Apocalypse
twenty times, and makes long extracts from it, as inspired
Scripture. These testimonies of persons contemporary with
John's immediate successors, and more or less connected
with the region of the seven churches to which Revelation
is addressed, are most convincing. TERTULLIAN,
of North Africa (about A.D.
220), [Against Marcion, 3.14], quotes the apostle
John's descriptions in the Apocalypse of the sword
proceeding out of the Lord's mouth (@Re
19:15), and of the heavenly city (@Re
21:1-27). Compare On the Resurrection of the Flesh
[27]; A Treatise on the Soul, [8, 9, &c.]; The
Prescription Against Heretics, [33]. The MURATORI
fragment of the canon (about A.D.
200) refers to John the apostle writing to the seven
churches. HIPPOLYTUS,
bishop of Ostia, near Rome (about
A.D. 240) [On Antichrist, p.
67], quotes @Re
17:1-18, as the writing of John the apostle. Among HIPPOLYTUS'
works, there is specified in the catalogue on his statue,
a treatise "on the Apocalypse and Gospel according to
John." CLEMENT OF
ALEXANDRIA
(about A.D.
200) [Miscellanies, 6.13], alludes to the
twenty-four seats on which the elders sit as mentioned by
John in the Apocalypse (@Re
4:5); also, [Who Is the Rich Man Who Shall Be
Saved? 42], he mentions John's return from Patmos to
Ephesus on the death of the Roman tyrant. ORIGEN
(about A.D.
233), [Commentary on Matthew, in EUSEBIUS
Ecclesiastical History, 6.25], mentions John as the
author of the Apocalypse, without expressing any doubts as
to its authenticity; also, in Commentary on Matthew,
[16.6], he quotes @Re
1:9, and says, "John seems to have beheld the
Apocalypse in the island of Patmos." VICTORINUS,
bishop of Pettau in Pannonia, who suffered martyrdom under
Diocletian in A.D.
303, wrote the earliest extant commentary on the
Apocalypse. Though the Old Syriac Peschito version
does not contain the Apocalypse, yet EPHREM
THE SYRIAN
(about A.D.
378) frequently quotes the Apocalypse as canonical, and
ascribes it to John.
Its canonicity and
inspiration (according to a scholium of ANDREAS
OF CAPPADOCIA)
are attested by PAPIAS,
a hearer of John, and associate of POLYCARP.
PAPIAS was
bishop of Hierapolis, near Laodicea, one of the
seven churches. WORDSWORTH
conjectures that a feeling of shame, on account of the
rebukes of Laodicea in Revelation, may have
operated on the Council of Laodicea, so as to omit
Revelation from its list of books to be read publicly
(?). The Epistle of the churches of Lyons and Vienne to
the churches of Asia and Phrygia (in EUSEBIUS,
[Ecclesiastical History, 5.1-3]), in the
persecution under Marcus Aurelius (A.D.
77) quotes @Re
1:5 3:14 14:4 22:11, as Scripture. CYPRIAN
(about A.D.
250) also, in Epistle 13, quotes @Re
2:5 as Scripture; and in Epistle 25 he quotes @Re
3:21, as of the same authority as the Gospel. (For
other instances, see ALFORD'S
Prolegomena, from whom mainly this summary of
evidence has been derived). ATHANASIUS,
in his Festival Epistle, enumerates the Apocalypse
among the canonical Scriptures, to which none must
add, and from which none must take away. JEROME
[Epistle to Paulinus] includes in the canon the
Apocalypse, adding, "It has as many mysteries as words.
All praise falls short of its merits. In each of its words
lie hid manifold senses." Thus an unbroken chain of
testimony down from the apostolic period confirms its
canonicity and authenticity.
The ALOGI
[EPIPHANIUS,
Heresies, 51] and CAIUS
the Roman presbyter [EUSEBIUS,
Ecclesiastical History, 3.28], towards the end of
the second and beginning of the third century, rejected
John's Apocalypse on mere captious grounds. CAIUS,
according to JEROME
[On Illustrious Men], about
A.D. 210, attributed it to Cerinthus,
on the ground of its supporting the millennial reign on
earth. DIONYSIUS OF
ALEXANDRIA
mentions many before his time who rejected it because of
its obscurity and because it seemed to support Cerinthus'
dogma of an earthly and carnal kingdom; whence they
attributed it to Cerinthus. This DIONYSIUS,
scholar of ORIGEN,
and bishop of Alexandria (A.D.
247), admits its inspiration (in EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 7.10]), but attributes it
to some John distinct from John the apostle, on the ground
of its difference of style and character, as compared with
John's Gospel and Epistle, as also because the name John
is several times mentioned in the Apocalypse, which is
always kept back in both the Gospel and Epistle; moreover,
neither does the Epistle make any allusion to the
Apocalypse, nor the Apocalypse to the Epistle; and the
style is not pure Greek, but abounds in barbarisms
and solecisms. EUSEBIUS
wavers in opinion [Ecclesiastical History, 24.39]
as to whether it is, or is not, to be ranked among the
undoubtedly canonical Scriptures. His antipathy to the
millennial doctrine would give an unconscious bias to his
judgment on the Apocalypse. CYRIL
OF JERUSALEM
(A.D. 386), [Catechetical
Lectures, 4.35,36], omits the Apocalypse in
enumerating the New Testament Scriptures to be read
privately as well as publicly. "Whatever is not read in
the churches, that do not even read by thyself; the
apostles and ancient bishops of the Church who transmitted
them to us were far wiser than thou art." Hence, we see
that, in his day, the Apocalypse was not read in the
churches. Yet in Catechetical Lectures, 1.4 he
quotes @Re
2:7,17; and in Catechetical Lectures, 1; 15.13
he draws the prophetical statement from @Re
17:11, that the king who is to humble the three kings
(@Da
7:8,20) is the eighth king. In Catechetical
Lectures, 15; 27 he similarly quotes from @Re
12:3,4. ALFORD
conjectures that CYRIL
had at some time changed his opinion, and that these
references to the Apocalypse were slips of memory whereby
he retained phraseology which belonged to his former, not
his subsequent views. The sixtieth canon (if genuine) of
the Laodicean Council in the middle of the fourth century
omits the Apocalypse from the canonical books. The Eastern
Church in part doubted, the Western Church, after the
fifth century, universally recognized, the Apocalypse. CYRIL
OF ALEXANDRIA
[On Worship, 146], though implying the fact of some
doubting its genuineness, himself undoubtedly accepts it
as the work of St. John. ANDREAS OF
CÆSAREA, in
Cappadocia, recognized as genuine and canonical, and wrote
the first entire and connected commentary on, the
Apocalypse. The sources of doubt seem to have been, (1)
the antagonism of many to the millennium, which is set
forth in it; (2) its obscurity and symbolism having caused
it not to be read in the churches, or to be taught to the
young. But the most primitive tradition is
unequivocal in its favor. In a word, the objective
evidence is decidedly for it; the only arguments against
it seem to have been subjective.
The personal notices of John in
the Apocalypse occur @Re
1:1,4,9 @Re
22:8. Moreover, the writer's addresses to the churches
of Proconsular Asia (@Re
2:1) accord with the concurrent tradition, that after
John's return from his exile in Patmos, at the death of
Domitian, under Nerva, he resided for long, and died at
last in Ephesus, in the time of Trajan [EUSEBIUS,
Ecclesiastical History, 3.20,23]. If the Apocalypse
were not the inspired work of John, purporting as it does
to be an address from their superior to the seven churches
of Proconsular Asia, it would have assuredly been rejected
in that region; whereas the earliest testimonies
in those churches are all in its favor. One person
alone was entitled to use language of authority such as is
addressed to the seven angels of the churches--namely,
John, as the last surviving apostle and superintendent of
all the churches. Also, it accords with John's manner to
assert the accuracy of his testimony both at the beginning
and end of his book (compare @Re
1:2,3 22:8, with @Joh
1:14 21:24 @1Jo
1:1,2). Again, it accords with the view of the writer
being an inspired apostle that he addresses the
angels or presidents of the several churches in the tone
of a superior addressing inferiors. Also, he
commends the Church of Ephesus for trying and convicting
"them which say they are apostles, and are not," by
which he implies his own undoubted claim to apostolic
inspiration (@Re
2:2), as declaring in the seven epistles Christ's will
revealed through him.
As to the difference of style, as
compared with the Gospel and Epistle, the difference of
subject in part accounts for it, the visions of the
seer, transported as he was above the region of sense,
appropriately taking a form of expression abrupt, and
unbound by the grammatical laws which governed his
writings of a calmer and more deliberate character.
Moreover, as being a Galilean Hebrew, John, in writing a
Revelation akin to the Old Testament prophecies, naturally
reverted to their Hebraistic style. ALFORD
notices, among the features of resemblance between the
styles of the Apocalypse and John's Gospel and Epistle:
(1) the characteristic appellation of our Lord, peculiar
to John exclusively, "the Word of God" (@Re
19:13; compare @Joh
1:1 1Jo 1:1). (2) the phrase, "he that overcometh" (@Re
2:7,11,17 3:5,12,21 12:11 15:2 17:14 21:7; compare @Joh
16:33 @1Jo
2:13,14 4:4 5:4,5). (3) The Greek term (alethinos)
for "true," as opposed to that which is shadowy and unreal
(@Re
3:7,14 6:10 15:3 16:7 19:2,9,11 21:5 22:6). This term,
found only once in Luke (@Lu
16:11), four times in Paul (@1Th
1:9 Heb 8:2 9:24 10:22), is found nine times in John's
Gospel (@Joh
1:9 4:23,37 6:32 7:28 8:16 15:1 @Joh
17:3 19:3,5), twice in John's First Epistle (@1Jo
2:8 5:20), and ten times in Revelation (@Re
3:7,14 6:10 15:3 16:7 19:2,9,11 21:5 @Re
22:6). (4) The Greek diminutive for "Lamb" (arnion,
literally, "lambkin") occurs twenty-nine times in the
Apocalypse, and the only other place where it occurs is @Joh
21:15. In John's writings alone is Christ called
directly "the Lamb" (@Joh
1:29,36). in @1Pe
1:19, He is called "as a lamb without blemish," in
allusion to @Isa
53:7. So the use of "witness," or "testimony" (@Re
1:2,9 6:9 11:7, &c.; compare @Joh
1:7,8,15,19,32 1Jo 1:2 4:14 5:6-11). "Keep the word,"
or "commandments" (@Re
3:8,10 12:17; compare @Joh
8:51,55 14:15). The assertion of the same thing
positively and negatively (@Re
2:2,6,8,13 3:8,17,18; compare @Joh
1:3,6,7,20 1Jo 2:27,28). Compare also @1Jo
2:20,27 with @Re
3:18, as to the spiritual anointing. The
seeming solecisms of style are attributable to
that,inspired elevation which is above mere grammatical
rules, and are designed to arrest the reader's attention
by the peculiarity of the phrase, so as to pause and
search into some deep truth lying beneath. The vivid
earnestness of the inspired writer, handling a subject so
transcending all others, raises him above all servile
adherence to ordinary rules, so that at times he abruptly
passes from one grammatical construction to another, as he
graphically sets the thing described before the eye of the
reader. This is not due to ignorance of grammar, for he
"has displayed a knowledge of grammatical rules in other
much more difficult constructions" [WINER].
The connection of thought is more attended to than
mere grammatical connection. Another consideration to be
taken into account is that two-fifths of the whole being
the recorded language of others, he moulds his style
accordingly. Compare TREGELLES'
Introduction to Revelation from
Heathen Authorities.
TREGELLES
well says [New Testament Historic Evidence], "There
is no book of the New Testament for which we have such
clear, ample, and numerous testimonies in the second
century as we have in favor of the Apocalypse. The more
closely the witnesses were connected with the apostle John
(as was the case with IRENÆUS),
the more explicit is their testimony. That doubts should
prevail in after ages must have originated either in
ignorance of the earlier testimony, or else from some
supposed intuition of what an apostle ought to have
written. The objections on the ground of internal style
can weigh nothing against the actual evidence. It is in
vain to argue, a priori, that John could not have
written this book when we have the evidence of several
competent witnesses that he did write it."
RELATION OF
THE APOCALYPSE
TO THE REST OF THE CANON.--GREGORY
OF NYSSA
[tom. 3, p. 601], calls Revelation "the last book of
grace." It completes the volume of inspiration, so that we
are to look for no further revelation till Christ Himself
shall come. Appropriately the last book completing the
canon was written by John, the last survivor of the
apostles. The New Testament is composed of the historical
books, the Gospels and Acts, the doctrinal Epistles, and
the one prophetical book, Revelation. The same apostle
wrote the last of the Gospels, and probably the last of
the Epistles, and the only prophetical book of the New
Testament. All the books of the New Testament had been
written, and were read in the Church assemblies, some
years before John's death. His life was providentially
prolonged that he might give the final attestation to
Scripture. About the year A.D.
100, the bishops of Asia (the angels of the seven
churches) came to John at EPHESUS,
bringing him copies of the three Gospels, Matthew, Mark,
and Luke, and desired of him a statement of his
apostolical judgment concerning them; whereupon he
pronounced them authentic, genuine, and inspired, and at
their request added his own Gospel to complete the
fourfold aspect of the Gospel of Christ (compare MURATORI
[Fragment on the Canon of Scripture]; EUSEBIUS
[Ecclesiastical History, 3.24]; JEROME
[Commentary on Matthew]; VICTORINUS
on the Apocalypse; THEODORET
[Ecclesiastical History, 39]). A Greek divine,
quoted in ALLATIUS,
calls Revelation "the seal of the whole Bible." The canon
would be incomplete without Revelation. Scripture is a
complete whole, its component books, written in a period
ranging over one thousand five hundred years, being
mutually connected. Unity of aim and spirit pervades the
entire, so that the end is the necessary sequence of the
middle, and the middle of the beginning. Genesis presents
before us man and his bride in innocence and blessedness,
followed by man's fall through Satan's subtlety, and man's
consequent misery, his exclusion from Paradise and its
tree of life and delightful rivers. Revelation presents,
in reverse order, man first liable to sin and death, but
afterwards made conqueror through the blood of the Lamb;
the first Adam and Eve, represented by the second Adam,
Christ, and the Church. His spotless bride, in Paradise,
with free access to the tree of life and the crystal water
of life that flows from the throne of God. As Genesis
foretold the bruising of the serpent's head by the woman's
seed (@Ge
3:15), so Revelation declares the final accomplishment
of that prediction (@Re
19:1-20:15).
PLACE AND
TIME OF WRITING.--The best
authorities among the Fathers state that John was exiled
under Domitian (IRENÆUS
[Against Heresies, 5; 30]; CLEMENT
OF ALEXANDRIA;
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical
History, 3.20]). VICTORINUS
says that he had to labor in the mines of Patmos. At
Domitian's death, A.D.
95, he returned to Ephesus under the Emperor Nerva.
Probably it was immediately after his return that he
wrote, under divine inspiration, the account of the
visions vouchsafed to him in Patmos (@Re
1:2,9). However, @Re
10:4 seems to imply that he wrote the visions
immediately after seeing them. Patmos is one of the
Sporades. Its circumference is about thirty miles. "It was
fitting that when forbidden to go beyond certain bounds of
the earth's lands, he was permitted to penetrate the
secrets of heaven" [BEDE,
Explanation of the Apocalypse on chap. 1]. The
following arguments favor an earlier date, namely, under
Nero: (1) EUSEBIUS
[Demonstration of the Gospel] unites in the same
sentence John's banishment with the stoning of James and
the beheading of Paul, which were under Nero. (2) CLEMENT
OF ALEXANDRIA'S'S
story of the robber reclaimed by John, after he had
pursued, and with difficulty overtaken him, accords better
with John then being a younger man than under Domitian,
when he was one hundred years old. Arethas, in the sixth
century, applies the sixth seal to the destruction of
Jerusalem (A.D.
70), adding that the Apocalypse was written before that
event. So the Syriac version states he was banished
by Nero the Cæsar. Laodicea was overthrown by an
earthquake (A.D.
60) but was immediately rebuilt, so that its being called
"rich and increased with goods" is not incompatible with
this book having been written under the Neronian
persecution (A.D.
64). But the possible allusions to it in @Heb
10:37; compare @Re
1:4,8 4:8 22:12; @Heb
11:10; compare @Re
21:14 ; @Heb
12:22,23; compare @Re
14:1; @Heb
8:1,2; compare @Re
11:19 15:5 21:3; @Heb
4:12; compare @Re
1:16 2:12,16 19:13,15; @Heb
4:9; compare @Re
20: 1-15; also @1Pe
1:7,13 4:13, with @Re
1:1; @1Pe
2:9 with @Re
5:10; @2Ti
4:8, with @Re
2:26,27 3:21 11:18; @Eph
6:12, wit h @Re
12:7-12; @Php
4:3, with @Re
3:5 13:8,17:8 20:12 ,15; @Col
1:18, with @Re
1:5; @1Co
15:52, with @Re
10:7 11:15-18, make a date before the destruction of
Laodicea possible. Cerinthus is stated to have died before
John; as then he borrowed much in his Pseudo-Apocalypse
from John's, it is likely the latter was at an earlier
date than Domitian's reign. See TILLOCH'S
Introduction to Apocalypse. But the Pauline
benediction (@Re
1:4) implies it was written after Paul's death under
Nero.
TO WHAT
READERS ADDRESSED.--The inscription
states that it is addressed to the seven churches of Asia,
that is, Proconsular Asia. John's reason for fixing on the
number seven (for there were more than seven
churches in the region meant by "Asia," for instance,
Magnesia and Tralles) was doubtless because seven
is the sacred number implying totality and universality:
so it is implied that John, through the medium of the
seven churches, addresses in the Spirit the Church of all
places and ages. The Church in its various states of
spiritual life or deadness, in all ages and places, is
represented by the seven churches, and is addressed with
words of consolation or warning accordingly. Smyrna and
Philadelphia alone of the seven are honored with unmixed
praise, as faithful in tribulation and rich in good works.
Heresies of a decided kind had by this time arisen in the
churches of Asia, and the love of many had waxed cold,
while others had advanced to greater zeal, and one had
sealed his testimony with his blood.
OBJECT.--It
begins with admonitory addresses to the seven churches
from the divine Son of man, whom John saw in vision, after
a brief introduction which sets forth the main subject of
the book, namely, to "show unto His servants things which
must shortly come to pass" (the first through third
chapters). From the fourth chapter to the end is mainly
prophecy, with practical exhortations and consolations,
however, interspersed, similar to those addressed to the
seven churches (the representatives of the universal
Church of every age), and so connecting the body of the
book with its beginning, which therefore forms its
appropriate introduction. Three schools of interpreters
exist: (1) The Preterists, who hold that almost the whole
has been fulfilled. (2) The Historical Interpreters, who
hold that it comprises the history of the Church from
John's time to the end of the world, the seals being
chronologically succeeded, by the trumpets and the
trumpets by the vials. (3) The Futurists, who consider
almost the whole as yet future, and to be fulfilled
immediately before Christ's second coming. The first
theory was not held by any of the earliest Fathers, and is
only held now by Rationalists, who limit John's vision to
things within his own horizon, pagan Rome's persecutions
of Christians, and its consequently anticipated
destruction. The Futurist school is open to this great
objection: it would leave the Church of Christ unprovided
with prophetical guidance or support under her fiery
trials for 1700 or 1800 years. Now God has said, "Surely
He will do nothing, but He revealeth His secrets unto His
servants the prophets" (@Am
3:7). The Jews had a succession of prophets who guided
them with the light of prophecy: what their prophets were
to them, that the apocalyptic Scriptures have been, and
are, to us.
ALFORD,
following ISAAC
WILLIAMS,
draws attention to the parallel connection between the
Apocalypse and Christ's discourse on the Mount of Olives,
recorded in @Mt
24:4-28. The seals plainly bring us down to the second
coming of Christ, just as the trumpets also do (compare @Re
6:12-17 8:1, &c. @Re
11:15), and as the vials also do (@Re
16:17): all three run parallel, and end in the same
point. Certain "catchwords" (as WORDSWORTH
calls them) connect the three series of symbols together.
They do not succeed one to the other in historical and
chronological sequence, but move side by side, the
subsequent series filling up in detail the same picture
which the preceding series had drawn in outline. So VICTORINUS
(on @Re
7:2), the earliest commentator on the Apocalypse,
says, "The order of the things said is not to be regarded,
since often the Holy Spirit, when He has run to the end of
the last time, again returns to the same times, and
supplies what He has less fully expressed." And PRIMASIUS
[Commentary on the Apocalypse], "In the trumpets he
gives a description by a pleasing repetition, as is
his custom."
At the very beginning, John
hastens, by anticipation (as was the tendency of all the
prophets), to the grand consummation. @Re
1:7, "Behold, He cometh with clouds," &c. @Re
1:8,17, "I am the beginning and the ending
. . . the first and the last." So the seven
epistles exhibit the same anticipation of the end. @Re
3:12, "Him that overcometh, I will write upon Him the
name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, which
is new Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven";
compare at the close, @Re
21:2. So also @Re
2:28, "I will give him the morning star"; compare at
the close, @Re
22:16, "I am the bright and morning star."
Again, the earthquake that
ensues on the opening of the sixth seal is one of the
catchwords, that is, a link connecting chronologically
this sixth seal with the sixth trumpet (@Re
9:13 11:13): compare also the seventh vial, @Re
16:17,18. The concomitants of the opening of the sixth
seal, it is plain, in no full and exhaustive sense apply
to any event, save the terrors which shall overwhelm the
ungodly just before the coming of the Judge.
Again, the beast out of the
bottomless pit (@Re
11:7), between the sixth and seventh trumpets,
connects this series with the section, twelfth through
fourteenth chapters, concerning the Church and her
adversaries.
Again, the sealing of the 144,000
under the sixth seal connects this seal with the section,
the twelfth through fourteenth chapters.
Again, the loosing of the four
winds by the four angels standing on the four corners of
the earth, under the sixth seal, answers to the loosing of
the four angels at the Euphrates, under the sixth
trumpet.
Moreover, links occur in the
Apocalypse connecting it with the Old Testament. For
instance, the "mouth speaking great things" (@Da
7:8 @Re
13:5), connects the beast that blasphemes against
God, and makes war against the saints, with the
little horn (@Da
7:21 Re 13:6,7), or at last king, who, arising after
the ten kings, shall speak against the Most High, and
wear out the saints (@Da
7:25); also, compare the "forty-two months" (@Re
13:5), or "a thousand two hundred and threescore days"
(@Re
12:6), with the "time, times, and the dividing of
time," of @Da
7:25. Moreover, the "forty-two months," @Re
11:2, answering to @Re
12:6 13:5, link together the period under the sixth
trumpet to the section, @Re
12:1-14:20.
AUBERLEN
observes, "The history of salvation is mysteriously
governed by holy numbers. They are the scaffolding of the
organic edifice. They are not merely outward indications
of time, but indications of nature and essence. Not only
nature, but history, is based in numbers. Scripture and
antiquity put numbers as the fundamental forms of things,
where we put ideas." As number is the regulator of the
relations and proportions of the natural world, so does it
enter most frequently into the revelations of the
Apocalypse, which sets forth the harmonies of the
supernatural, the immediately Divine. Thus the most
supernatural revelation leads us the farthest into the
natural, as was to be expected, seeing the God of nature
and of revelation is one. Seven is the number for
perfection (compare @Re
1:4 4:5, the seven Spirits before the throne;
also, @Re
5:6, the Lamb's seven horns and seven
eyes). Thus the seven churches represent the Church
catholic in its totality. The seven seals (@Re
5:1), the seven trumpets (@Re
8:2), and the seven vials (@Re
17:1), are severally a complete series each in itself,
fulfilling perfectly the divine course of judgments.
Three and a half implies a number opposed to the
divine (seven), but broken in itself, and which, in the
moment of its highest triumph, is overwhelmed by judgment
and utter ruin. Four is the number of the world's
extension; seven is the number of God's revelation
in the world. In the four beasts of Daniel (@Da
7:3) there is a recognition of some power above them,
at the same time that there is a mimicry of the four
cherubs of Ezekiel (@Eze
10:9), the heavenly symbols of all creation in its due
subjection to God (@Re
4:6-8). So the four corners of the earth, the four
winds, the four angels loosed from the Euphrates, and
Jerusalem lying "foursquare" (@Re
21:16), represent world-wide extension. The
sevenfoldness of the Spirits on the part of God
corresponds with the fourfold cherubim on the part of the
created. John, seeing more deeply into the essentially
God-opposed character of the world, presents to us, not
the four beasts of Daniel, but the seven
heads of the beast, whereby it arrogates to itself the
sevenfold perfection of the Spirits of God; at
the same time that, with characteristic
self-contradiction, it has ten horns, the number
peculiar to the world power. Its unjust usurpation of the
sacred number seven is marked by the addition of an
eighth to the seven heads, and also by the
beast's own number, six hundred sixty-six, which in units,
tens, and hundreds, verges upon, but falls short of,
seven. The judgments on the world are complete in
six: after the sixth seal and the sixth trumpet, there
is a pause. When seven comes, there comes "the
kingdom of our Lord and His Christ." Six is the number of
the world given to judgment. Moreover, six is half
of twelve, as three and a half is the half
of seven. Twelve is the number of the Church:
compare the twelve tribes of Israel, the twelve
stars on the woman's head (@Re
12:1), the twelve gates of new Jerusalem (@Re
21:12,21). Six thus symbolizes the world
broken, and without solid foundation. Twice twelve is the
number of the heavenly elders; twelve times twelve
thousand the number of the sealed elect (@Re
7:4): the tree of life yields twelve manner of fruits.
Doubtless, besides this symbolic force, there is a special
chronological meaning in the numbers; but as yet, though a
commanded subject of investigation, they have
received no solution which we can be sure is the true one.
They are intended to stimulate reverent inquiry, not to
gratify idle speculative curiosity; and when the event
shall have been fulfilled, they will show the divine
wisdom of God, who ordered all things in minutely
harmonious relations, and left neither the times nor the
ways haphazard.
The arguments for the year-day
theory are as follows: @Da
9:24, "Seventy weeks are determined upon," where the
Hebrew may be seventy sevens; but MEDE
observes, the Hebrew word means always seven of
days, and never seven of years (@Le
12:5 De 16:9,10,16). Again, the number of years'
wandering of the Israelites was made to correspond to the
number of days in which the spies searched the
land, namely, forty: compare "each day for a year,"
@Nu
14:33,34. So in @Eze
4:5,6, "I have laid up on thee the years of
their iniquity, according to the number of the days,
three hundred and ninety days . . . forty days: I have
appointed thee each day for a year." John, in
Revelation itself, uses days in a sense which can
hardly be literal. @Re
2:10, "Ye shall have tribulation ten days": the
persecution of ten years recorded by EUSEBIUS
seems to correspond to it. In the year-day theory there is
still quite enough of obscurity to exercise the patience
and probation of faith, for we cannot say precisely
when the 1260 years begin: so that this theory
is quite compatible with Christ's words, "Of that day and
hour knoweth no man" (@Mt
24:36 @Mr
13:32). However, it is a difficulty in this theory
that "a thousand years," in @Re
20:6,7, can hardly mean one thousand by three hundred
sixty days, that is, three hundred sixty thousand years.
The first resurrection there must be literal, even as @Re
20:5 must be taken literally, "the rest of the dead
lived not again until the thousand years were finished" (@Re
20:5). To interpret the former spiritually would
entail the need of interpreting the latter so, which would
be most improbable; for it would imply that "the rest
of the (spiritually) dead lived not
(spiritually)" until the end of the thousand years, and
then that they did come spiritually to life. @1Co
15:23, "they that are Christ's at His coming,"
confirms the literal view.
|
|