CHAPTER XIV. Back
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THE PATMOS VISIONS
NARROWNESS of interpretation is the bane of apocalyptic study. "The words of
this prophecy," "Things which must shortly come to pass'" such is the Divine
description of the Book of the Revelation and of its contents. No one,
therefore, is justified in denying to any portion of it a future application.
The Book in its entirety is prophetic. Even the seven epistles, though they were
undoubtedly addressed to Churches then existing, and though their intermediate
reference to the history of Christendom is also clear, may well have a special
voice in days to come for those who are to enter the fierce trials that shall
precede the end. [1]
In the fourth chapter the throne is set in heaven. Judgment now waits on
grace; but when the day of grace is past, judgment must intervene ere the
promises and covenants, with all their rich store of blessings, can be
fulfilled. But who can unfold that scroll that lies on the open hand of Him who
sits upon the throne? (Revelation 5:2) No creature in the universe
[2]
may dare to look on it, and God Himself will not break a single seal of
it, for the Father has ceded the prerogative of judgment. The ministry of grace
may be shared by all whom grace has blessed, but the Son of man is the only
Being in the universe who can take the initiative in judgment; (John 5:22-27)
and amid the anthems of the heavenly beings round the throne, and the swelling
chorus of myriads of myriads of angels, echoed back by the whole creation of
God, the Crucified of Calvary, "a Lamb, as it had been slain," takes up the book
and prepares to break the seals. (Revelation 5:5-14)
It is at the fifth seal that the vision crosses the lines of the chronology
of prophecy. [3]
Of the earlier seals, therefore, it is unnecessary to speak in detail.
They are evidently descriptive of the events to which the Lord referred in the
twenty-fourth chapter of Matthew, as preceding the great final persecution;
wars and unceasing threats of war, kingdoms in arms rushing on one another to
destruction; and then famine, to be followed again by pestilence, hunger and the
sword still claiming their victims, and others being seized by strange and
nameless deaths in the ever-gathering horrors of these cumulative woes.
(Revelation 6:2-8)
According to the twenty-fourth chapter of Matthew, the tribulation is to be
followed immediately by the signs and portents which the old prophets have
declared will herald "the great and terrible day of the Lord." So in the
Apocalypse the martyrs of the tribulation are seen in the fifth seal,
(Revelation 9) and in the sixth, the advent of the great day of wrath is
proclaimed, the precise events being named which the Lord had spoken of on the
Mount of Olives, and Joel and Isaiah had foretold long centuries before.
[4]
Like the dull, oppressive calm which precedes the fiercest storms, there
is silence in heaven when the last seal is broken, (Revelation 8:1) for the day
of vengeance has dawned. The events of the earlier seals were Divine judgments,
doubtless, but of a providential character, and such as men can account for by
secondary causes. But God has at length declared Himself, and as it has been in
the past, so now, the occasion is an outrage committed on His people. The cry of
martyrs is come up in remembrance before God, (Revelation 3) and it is the
signal for the trumpet blasts which herald the outpouring of the long-pent-up
wrath. (Revelation 6)
To write a commentary on the Apocalypse within the limits of a chapter would be
impossible, and the attempt would involve a departure from the special purpose
and subject of these pages. But it is essential to notice and keep in view the
character and method of the Apocalyptic visions. The seer, be it remembered, was
not privileged to read a single line of what was written "within and on the back
side" of the sealed scroll of the fifth chapter; but as each seal was broken,
some prominent characteristic of a portion of its contents was communicated to
him in a vision. The main series of the visions, therefore, represent events in
their chronological sequence. But their course is occasionally interrupted by
parenthetical or episodical visions; sometimes, as between the sixth and seventh
seals, reaching on to the time of the end, and more frequently, as between the
sixth and seventh trumpets, representing details chronologically within the
earlier visions. The first and most important step, therefore, towards a right
understanding of the Apocalypse is to distinguish between the serial and the
episodical visions of the Book, and the following analysis is offered to promote
and assist inquiry upon the subject. [5]
First, because the seventh trumpet and the seventh vial both relate to the
final catastrophe. Under the seventh trumpet, the mystery of God is finished
(10:7), and the temple of God is opened, and there are lightnings, voices,
thunders, and an earthquake (11:19). Under the seventh vial, "It is done!" is
heard from the temple, and there are voices, thunders, lightnings, and an
earthquake (16:17, 18).
Second, because the sphere of the judgments is the same in the correlative
visions of both series:
As the last trumpet and the last vial embrace the final judgments of the day
of vengeance, which precede the advent of the glorious kingdom, they necessarily
include the doom of the two great antichristian powers of the last days, the
imperial represented by the ten-horned beast, and the ecclesiastical typified by
the scarlet woman. The visions of the thirteenth and seventeenth chapters,
therefore, are interposed, descriptive of the rise and development of these
powers. These accordingly give us details which relate to events within the
earlier seals, for the martyrs of the fifth seal are the victims of the great
persecutor of the thirteenth chapter.
If the foregoing scheme be correct in the main, the eras included in the
Revelation may be divided thus:
It is manifestly within the period of the seals that the prophecies of Daniel
have their fulfillment, and the next inquiry should be directed to ascertain the
points of contact between the visions of St. John and the earlier prophecies.
As already noticed, it is only in so far as prophecy falls within the seventy
weeks that it comes within the range of human chronology. And further, the
seventieth week will be a definite period, of which the epoch of the middle and
the end are definitely marked. The epoch of the first week, that is, of the
prophetic period as a whole, was not the return of the Jews from Babylon, nor
yet the rebuilding of their temple, but the signing of the Persian decree which
restored their national position. So also the beginning of the last week will
date, not from their restoration to Judea, nor yet from the future rebuilding of
their shrine, but from the signing of the treaty by "the coming Prince," which
probably will once more recognize them as a nation. [8]
But it is obvious that this personage must have attained to power before
the date of that event; and it is expressly stated (Daniel 7:24) that his rise
is to be after that of the ten kingdoms which are hereafter to divide the
Roman earth. It follows, therefore, that the development of these kingdoms, and
the rise of the great Kaiser who is to wield the imperial scepter in the last
days, must be prior to the beginning of the seventieth week.
[9]
And within certain limits, we can also fix the order of the subsequent events.
The violation of the treaty by the defilement of the Holy Place is to occur "in
the midst of the week." (Daniel 9:27) That event, again, is to be the epoch of
the great persecution by Antichrist, (Matthew 24:15- 21) which is to last
precisely three and a half years; for his power to persecute the Jews is to be
limited to that definite period. (Daniel 7:25; Revelation 13:5)
"Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and
the moon shall not give her light." (Matthew 24:29) Such is the statement
of the twenty-fourth of Matthew; and the sixth of Revelation exactly coincides
with it, for the vision of the fifth seal embraced the period of "the
tribulation"; and when the sixth seal was opened, "the sun became black as
sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood," and the cry went forth, "The
great day of His wrath is come." (Revelation 6:12, 17) In keeping with this,
again, is the prophecy of Joel. "The sun shall be turned
into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and the terrible day of
the Lord come." (Joel 2:31) The events of this day of vengeance are the
burden of the vision of the seventh seal, including the judgment of Babylon, the
scarlet woman or the religious apostasy by the agency of the imperial power
(Revelation 17:16, 17) the beast, whose fearful end is to bring the awful drama
to a close. (Revelation 19:20) We have definite grounds, therefore, for
assigning the following order to the events of the last days:
That the seventieth week will be the last seven years of the dispensation,
and the term of the reign of Antichrist, is a belief as old as the writings of
the Ante-Nicene Fathers. But a careful examination of the statements of
Scripture will lead to some modification of this view. The fulfillment to Judah
of the blessings specified in Daniel 9:24 is all that Scripture expressly states
will mark the close of the seventieth week. Antichrist will then be driven out
of Judea; but there is no reason whatever to suppose he will otherwise lose his
power. As already shown, the seventieth week ends with the period of the fifth
seal, whereas the fall of Babylon is within the era of the seventh seal. No one
may assert that that era will be of long duration, and it will probably be
brief; but the only certain indication of its length is that it will be within a
single lifetime, for at its close the Antichrist is to be seized alive, and
hurled to his awful doom (Revelation 19:20).
The analogy of the past might lead us to expect that the events foretold to
occur at the end of the seventieth week would follow immediately at its close.
But the Book of Daniel expressly teaches that there will be an interval.
Whatever view be taken of the earlier portion of the eleventh of Daniel, it is
clear that "the king" of the thirty-sixth and following verses is the great
enemy of the last days. His wars and conquests are predicted,
[10]
and the twelfth chapter opens with the mention of the predicted time of
trouble, "the great tribulation" of Matthew and Revelation. The seventh verse
specifies the duration of the "time of trouble" as "a time, times, and a half,"
which, as already shown, is the half week, or 1, 260 days. But the eleventh
verse expressly declares that from the date of the event which is to divide the
week, and which, according to Matthew 24., is to be the signal of persecution,
there shall be 1, 290 days; and the twelfth verse postpones the blessing to 1,
335 days, or seventy-five days beyond the close of the prophetic weeks.
If therefore "the day of the Lord" follows immediately upon the close of the
seventieth week, it seems that Judah's complete deliverance is not to take place
until after that final period has begun. And this is expressly confirmed by the
fourteenth chapter of Zechariah. It is a prophecy than which none is more
definite, and the difficulties which beset the interpretation of it are in no
degree overcome by refusing to read it literally. It seems to teach that at that
time Jerusalem is to be taken by the allied armies of the nations, and that at
the moment when a host of prisoners are being led away, God will intervene in
some miraculous way, as when He destroyed the army of Pharaoh at the Exodus
[11]
Comparison with the prophecy of the twenty-fourth chapter of St. Matthew
is the surest and strictest test which can be applied to these conclusions.
After fixing the epoch and describing the character of the great persecution of
the last days, the Lord thus enumerates the events which are to follow at its
close: First the great natural phenomena predicted; then the appearance of the
sign of the Son of man in heaven; then the mourning of the tribes of the land;
[12]
and finally the glorious advent.
That there will be no interval between the persecution and the "great
signs from heaven" (Luke 21:11) which are to follow it, is expressly stated;
they are to occur "immediately after the tribulation." That an interval
shall separate the other events of the series is equally clear. From the
defilement of the Holy Place, to the day when the tribulation shall end, and the
"fearful sights" and "great signs" from heaven shall strike terror into men's
hearts, shall be a definite period of 1,260 days; [13]
and yet when He goes on to speak of the Advent, the Lord declares that
that day is known to the Father only: it should be His people's part to watch
and wait. He had already warned them against being deceived by expecting His
Advent before the fulfillment of all that must come to pass (Matthew 24:4-28).
Now He warns them against apostasy after the accomplishment of all things,
because of the delay which even then shall still mark His coming.
[14]
The words of Christ are unequivocally true, and He never enjoins upon His
people to live in expectation of His coming, save at a time when nothing
intervenes to bar the fulfillment of the hope. Fatalism is as popular among
Christians as with the worshippers of Mahomet; and it is forgotten that though
the dispensation has run its course these eighteen centuries, it might have been
brought to a close at any moment. Hence the Christian is taught to live,
"looking for that blessed hope." (Titus 2:12, 13) It will be otherwise in days
to come, when the present dispensation shall have closed with the first stage of
the Advent. Then the word will be, not "Watch, for ye know not what hour your
Lord doth come," (Matthew 24:42) that belongs to the time when all shall have
been fulfilled, but "Take heed that no man deceive you, all these things must
come to pass, but the end is not yet." (Matthew 4:6)