Chapter 8:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Jude Genesis
Revelation 8
Verse 1. And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in
heaven - Such a silence is mentioned but in this one place. It was
uncommon, and highly observable: for praise is sounding in
heaven day and night. In particular, immediately before this
silence, all the angels, and before them the innumerable multitude,
had been crying with a loud voice; and now all is still at once:
there is an universal pause. Hereby the seventh seal is very
remarkably distinguished from the six preceding. This silence
before God shows that those who were round about him were
expecting, with the deepest reverence, the great things which the
Divine Majesty would farther open and order. Immediately after,
the seven trumpets are heard, and a sound more august than ever.
Silence is only a preparation: the grand point is, the sounding the
trumpets to the praise of God. About half an hour - To St. John, in
the vision, it might seem a common half hour.
Verse
2. And I saw - The seven trumpets belong to the seventh seal, as
do the seven phials to the seventh trumpet. This should be
carefully remembered, that we may not confound together the
times which follow each other. And yet it may be observed, in
general, concerning the times of the incidents mentioned in this
book, it is not a certain rule, that every part of the text is fully
accomplished before the completion of the following part begins.
All things mentioned in the epistles are not full accomplished
before the seals are opened; neither are all things mentioned under
the seals fulfilled before the trumpets begin; nor yet is the seventh
trumpet wholly past before the phials are poured out. Only the
beginning of each part goes before the beginning of the following.
Thus the epistles begin before the seals, the seals before the
trumpets, the trumpets before the phials. One epistle begins before
another, one seal before another, one trumpet especially before
another, one phial before another. Yet, sometimes, what begins
later than another thing ends sooner; and what begins earlier than
another thing ends later: so the seventh trumpet begins earlier than
the phials, and yet extends beyond them all. The seven angels
which stood before God - A character of the highest eminence.
And seven trumpets were given them. - When men desire to make
known openly a thing of public concern, they give a token that
may be seen or heard far and wide; and, among such, none are
more ancient than trumpets, Lev. xxv, 9; Num. x, 2; Amos iii, 6.
The Israelites, in particular, used them, both in the worship of
God and in war; therewith openly praising the power of God
before, after, and in, the battle, Josh. vi, 4; 2 Chron. xiii, 14, &c.
And the angels here made known by these trumpets the wonderful
works of God, whereby all opposing powers are successively
shaken, till the kingdom of the world becomes the kingdom of
God and his Anointed. These trumpets reach nearly from the time
of St. John to the end of the world; and they are distinguished by
manifest tokens. The place of the four first is specified; namely,
east, west, south, and north successively: in the three last,
immediately after the time of each, the place likewise is pointed
out. The seventh angel did not begin to sound, till after the going
forth of the second woe: but the trumpets were given to him and
the other six together; (as were afterward the phials to the seven
angels;) and it is accordingly said of all the seven together, that
"they prepared themselves to sound." These, therefore, were not
men, as some have thought, but angels, properly so called.
Verse
3. And - In the second verse, the "trumpets were given" to the
seven angels; and in the sixth, they "prepared to sound." But
between these, the incense of this angel and the prayers of the
saints are mentioned; the interposing of which shows, that the
prayers of the saints and the trumpets of the angels go together:
and these prayers, with the effects of them, may well be supposed
to extend through all the seven. Another angel - Another created
angel. Such are all that are here spoken of. In this part of the
Revelation, Christ is never termed an angel; but, "the Lamb."
Came and stood at the altar - Of burnt-offerings. And there was
given him a golden censer - A censer was a cup on a plate or
saucer. This was the token and the business of the office. And
much incense was given-Incense generally signifies prayer: here it
signifies the longing desires of the angels, that the holy counsel of
God might be fulfilled. And there was much incense; for as the
prayers of all the saints in heaven and earth are here joined
together: so are the desires of all the angels which are brought by
this angel. That he might place it - It is not said, offer it; for he
was discharging the office of an angel, not a priest. With the
prayers of all the saints - At the same time; but not for the saints.
The angels are fellowservants with the saints, not mediators for
them.
Verse
4. And the smoke of the incense came up before God, with the
prayers of the saints - A token that both were accepted.
Verse
5. And there were thunderings, and lightnings, and voices, and an
earthquake - These, especially when attended with fire, are
emblems of God's dreadful judgments, which are immediately to
follow.
Verse
6. And the seven angels prepared themselves to sound - That each,
when it should come to his turn, might sound without delay. But
while they do sound, they still stand before God.
Verse
7. And the first sounded - And every angel continued to sound, till
all which his trumpet brought was fulfilled and till the next began.
There are intervals between the three woes, but not between the
four first trumpets. And there was hail and fire mingled with
blood, and there were cast upon the earth - The earth seems to
mean Asia; Palestine, in particular. Quickly after the Revelation
was given, the Jewish calamities under Adrian began: yea, before
the reign of Trajan was ended. And here the trumpets begin. Even
under Trajan, in the year 114, the Jews made an insurrection with
a most dreadful fury; and in the parts about Cyrene, in Egypt, and
in Cyprus, destroyed four hundred and sixty thousand persons.
But they were repressed by the victorious power of Trajan, and
afterward slaughtered themselves in vast multitudes. The alarm
spread itself also into Mesopotamia, where Lucius Quintius slew a
great number of them. They rose in Judea again in the second year
of Adrian; but were presently quelled. Yet in 133 they broke out
more violently than ever, under their false messiah Barcochab;
and the war continued till the year 135, when almost all Judea was
desolated. In the Egyptian plague also hail and fire were together.
But here hail is to be taken figuratively, as also blood, for a
vehement, sudden, powerful, hurtful invasion; and fire betokens
the revenge of an enraged enemy, with the desolation therefrom.
And they were cast upon the earth - That is, the fire and hail and
blood. But they existed before they were cast upon the earth. The
storm fell, the blood flowed, and the flames raged round Cyrene,
and in Egypt, and Cyprus, before they reached Mesopotamia and
Judea. And the third part of the earth was burnt up - Fifty well-
fortified cities, and nine hundred and eighty-five well-inhabited
towns of the Jews, were wholly destroyed in this war. Vast tracts
of land were likewise left desolate and without inhabitant. And the
third part of the trees was burned up, and all the green grass was
burned up - Some understand by the trees, men of eminence
among the Jews; by the grass, the common people. The Roman
spared many of the former: the latter were almost all destroyed.
Thus vengeance began at the Jewish enemies of Christ's kingdom;
though even then the Roman did not quite escape. But afterwards
it came upon them more and more violently: the second trumpet
affects the Roman heathens in particular; the third, the dead,
unholy Christians; the fourth, the empire itself.
Verse
8. And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain
burning with fire was cast into the sea - By the sea, particularly as
it is here opposed to the earth, we may understand the west, or
Europe; and chiefly the middle parts of it, the vast Roman empire.
A mountain here seems to signify a great force and multitude of
people. Jer. li, 25; so this may point at the irruption of the
barbarous nations into the Roman empire. The warlike Goths
broke in upon it about the year 2l, and from that time the
irruption of one nation after another never ceased till the very
form of the Roman empire, and all but the name, was lost. The
fire may mean the fire of war, and the rage of those savage
nations. And the third part of the sea became blood - This need
not imply, that just a third part of the Roman was slain; but it is
certain an inconceivable deal of blood was shed in all these
invasions.
Verse
9. And the third part of the creatures that were in the sea - That is,
of all sorts of men, of every station and degree. Died - By those
merciless invaders. And the third part of the ships were destroyed
- It is a frequent thing to resemble a state or republic to a ship,
wherein many people are embarked together, and share in the
same dangers. And how many states were utterly destroyed by
those inhuman conquerors! Much likewise of this was literally
fulfilled. How often was the sea tinged with blood! How many of
those who dwelt mostly upon it were killed! And what number of
ships destroyed!
Verse
10. And the third angel sounded, and there fell from heaven a
great star, and it fell on the third part of the rivers - It seems Afric
is meant by the rivers; (with which this burning part of the world
abounds in an especial manner;) Egypt in particular, which the
Nile overflows every year far and wide. ln the whole African
history, between the irruption of the barbarous nations into the
Roman empire, and the ruin of the western empire, after the death
of Valentinian the Third, there is nothing more momentous than
the Arian calamity, which sprung up in the year 315. It is not
possible to tell how many persons, particularly at Alexandria, in
all Egypt, and in the neighbouring countries, were destroyed by
the rage of the Arians. Yet Afric fared better than other parts of
the empire, with regard to the barbarous nations, till the governor
of it, whose wife was a zealous Arian, and aunt to Genseric, king
of the Vandals, was, under that pretense, unjustly accused before
the empress Placidia. He was then prevailed upon to invite the
Vandals into Afric; who under Genseric, in the year 428, founded
there a kingdom of their own, which continued till the year 533.
Under these Vandal kings the true believers endured all manner of
afflictions and persecutions. And thus Arianism was the inlet to
all heresies and calamities, and at length to Mahometanism itself.
This great star was not an angel, (angels are not the agents in the
two preceding or the following trumpet,) but a teacher of the
church, one of the stars in the right hand of Christ. Such was
Arius. He fell from on high, as it were from heaven, into the most
pernicious doctrines, and made in his fall a gazing on all sides,
being great, and now burning as a torch. He fell on the third part
of the rivers - His doctrine spread far and wide, particularly in
Egypt. And on the fountains of water - wherewith Afric abounds.
Verse
11. And the name of the star is called Wormwood - The
unparalleled bitterness both of Arius himself and of his followers
show the exact propriety of his title. And the third part of the
waters became wormwood - A very considerable part of Afric
was infected with the same bitter doctrine and Spirit. And many
men (though not a third part of them) died - By the cruelty of the
Arians.
Verse
12. And the fourth angel sounded, and the third part of the sun
was smitten - Or struck. After the emperor Theodosius died, and
the empire was divided into the eastern and the western, the
barbarous nations poured in as a flood. The Goths and Hunns in
the years 403 and 405 fell upon Italy itself with an impetuous
force; and the former, in the year 410, took Rome by storm, and
plundered it without mercy. In the year 452 Attila treated the
upper part of Italy in the same manner. In 455 Valentinian the
Third was killed, and Genseric invited from Afric. He plundered
Rome for fourteen days together. Recimer plundered it again in
472. During all these commotions, one province was lost after
another, till, in the year 476, Odoacer seized upon Rome, deposed the emperor, and put an
end to the empire itself. An eclipse of the sun or moon is termed
by the Hebrews, a stroke. Now, as such a darkness does not come
all at once, but by degrees, so likewise did the darkness which fell
on the Roman, particularly the western empire; for the stroke
began long before Odoacer, namely, when the barbarians first
conquered the capital city. And the third part of the moon, and the
third part of the stars; so that the third part of them was darkened -
As under the first, second, and third trumpets by "the earth," "sea,
" and "rivers," are to be understood the men that inhabit them; so
here by the sun, moon, and stars, may be understood the men that
live under them, who are so overwhelmed with calamities in those
days of darkness, that they can no longer enjoy the light of
heaven: unless it may be thought to imply their being killed; so
that the sun, moon, and stars shine to them no longer. The very
same expression we find in Ezek. xxxii, 8. "I will darken all the
lights of heaven over them." As then the fourth seal transcends the
three preceding seals, so does the fourth trumpet the three
preceding trumpets. For in this not the third part of the earth, or
sea, or rivers only, but of all who are under the sun, are affected.
And the day shone not for a third part thereof - That is, shone with
only a third part of its usual brightness. And the night likewise -
The moon and stars having lost a third part of their lustre, either
with regard to those who, being dead, saw them no longer, or
those who saw them with no satisfaction. The three last trumpets
have the time of their continuance fixed, and between each of
them there is a remarkable pause: whereas between the four
former there is no pause, nor is the time of their continuance
mentioned; but all together these four seem to take up a little less
than four hundred years.
Verse
13. And I saw, and heard an angel flying - Between the trumpets
of the fourth and fifth angel. In the midst of heaven - The three
woes, as we shall see, stretch themselves over the earth from
Persia eastward, beyond Italy, westward; all which space had been
filled with the gospel by the apostles. In the midst of this lies
Patmos, where St. John saw this angel, saying, Woe, woe, woe -
Toward the end of the fifth century, there were many presages of
approaching calamities. To the inhabitants of the earth - All
without exception. Heavy trials were coming on them all. Even
while the angel was proclaiming this, the preludes of these three
woes were already in motion. These fell more especially on the
Jews. As to the prelude of the first woe in Persia, Isdegard II., in
454, was resolved to abolish the sabbath, till he was, by Rabbi
Mar, diverted from his purpose. Likewise in the year 474, Phiruz
afflicted the Jews much, and compelled many of them to
apostatize. A prelude of the second woe was the rise of the
Saracens, who, in 510, fell into Arabia and Palestine. To prepare
for the third woe, Innocent I., and his successors, not only
endeavoured to enlarge their episcopal jurisdiction beyond all
bounds, but also their worldly power, by taking every opportunity
of encroaching upon the empire, which as yet stood in the way of
their unlimited monarchy.
Chapter 8:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Jude Genesis
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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