Chapter 19:
| 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 19
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. A further account of the triumphant
song of angels and saints for the fall of Babylon (v. 1-4). II. The marriage
between Christ and the church proclaimed and perfected (v. 5-10). III. Another
warlike expedition of the glorious head and husband of the church, with the
success of it (v. 10, etc.).
Verses 1-4
The fall of Babylon being fixed, finished, and declared to be
irrecoverable in the foregoing chapter, this begins with a holy triumph over
her, in pursuance of the order given forth:
Rejoice over her, thou heaven,
and you holy apostles and prophets, ch. 18:20. They now gladly answer the
call; and here you have, 1. The form of their thanksgiving, in that heavenly and
most comprehensive word,
Alleluia, praise you the Lord: with this they
begin, with this they go on, and with this they end (v. 4); their prayers are
now turned into praises, their hosannas end in halleluias. 2. The matter of
their thanksgiving: they praise him for the truth of his word, and the
righteousness of his providential conduct, especially in this great eventthe
ruin of Babylon, which had been a mother, nurse, and nest of idolatry, lewdness,
and cruelty (v. 2), for which signal example of divine justice they ascribe
salvation,
and glory, and honour, and power, unto our God. 3. The effect of these their
praises: when the angels and saints cried
Alleluia, her fire burned more
fiercely and
her smoke ascended for ever and ever, v. 3. The surest way
to have our deliverances continued and completed is to give God the glory of
what he has done for us. Praising God for what we have is praying in the most
effectual manner for what is yet further to be done for us; the praises of the
saints blow up the fire of God's wrath against the common enemy. 4. The
blessed harmony between the angels and the saints in this triumphant song, v. 4.
The churches and their ministers take the melodious sound from the angels, and
repeat it; falling down, and worshipping God, they cry,
Amen, Alleluia.
Verses 5-10
The triumphant song being ended, and epithalamium, or
marriage-song, begins, v. 6. Here observe,
I. The concert of heavenly music. The chorus was large and loud,
as the voice of many waters and of mighty thunderings. God is fearful in
praises. There is no discord in heaven; the morning stars sing together; no
jarring string, nor key untuned, but pure and perfect melody.
II. The occasion of this song; and that is the reign and
dominion of that omnipotent God who has
redeemed his church by his own blood,
and is now in a more public manner betrothing her to himself:
The marriage of
the Lamb has come, v. 7. Some think this refers to the conversion of the
Jews, which they suppose will succeed the fall of Babylon; others, to the
general resurrection: the former seems more probable. Now, 1. You have here a
description of the bride, how she appeared; not in the gay and gaudy dress of
the mother of harlots, but
in fine linen, clean and white, which
is
the righteousness of saints; in the robes of Christ's righteousness, both
imputed for justification and imparted for sanctificationthe
stola,
the
white robe of absolution, adoption, and enfranchisement, and the
white robe of purity and universal holiness. She had
washed her robes and
made them white in the blood of the Lamb; and these her nuptial ornaments
she did not purchase by any price of her own, but received them as the gift and
grant of her blessed Lord. 2. The marriage-feast, which, though not particularly
described (as Mt. 22:4), yet is declared to be such as would make all those
happy who were called to it, so called as to accept the invitation, a feast made
up of the promises of the gospel,
the true sayings of God, v. 9. These
promises, opened, applied, sealed, and earnested by
the Spirit of God, in
holy eucharistical ordinances, are the marriage-feast; and the whole collective
body of all those who partake of this feast is the bride,
the Lamb's wife;
they eat into one body, and drink into one Spirit, and are not mere spectators
or guests, but coalesce into the espoused party, the mystical body of Christ. 3.
The transport of joy which the apostle felt in himself at this vision.
He
fell down at the feet of the angel, to worship him, supposing him to be more
than a creature, or having his thoughts at the present overpowered by the
vehemency of his affections. Here observe, (1.) What honour he offered to the
angel:
He fell at his feet, to worship him; this prostration was a part
of external worship, it was a posture of proper adoration. (2.) How the angel
refused it, and this was with some resentment:
"See thou do it not;
have a care what thou doest, thou art doing a wrong thing." (3.) He gave a
very good reason for his refusal:
"I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy
brethren which have the testimony of JesusI am a creature, thine equal in
office, though not in nature;
I, as an angel and messenger of God,
have
the testimony of Jesus, a charge to be a witness for him and to testify
concerning him, and thou, as an apostle, having
the Spirit of prophecy,
hast the same testimony to give in; and therefore we are in this brethren and
fellow-servants." (4.) He directs him to the true and only object of
religious worship; namely, God:
"Worship God, and him alone."
This fully condemns both the practice of the papists in worshipping the elements
of bread and wine, and saints, and angels, and the practice of those Socinians
and Arians who do not believe that Christ is truly and by nature God, and yet
pay him religious worship; and this shows what wretched fig-leaves all their
evasions and excuses are which they offer in their own vindication: they stand
hereby convicted of idolatry by a messenger from heaven.
Verses 11-21
No sooner was the marriage solemnized between Christ and his
church by the conversion of the Jews than the glorious head and husband of the
church is called out to a new expedition, which seems to be the great battle
that was to be fought at Armageddon, foretold ch. 16:16. And here observe,
I. The description of the great Commander, 1. By the seat of his
empire; and that is
heaven; his throne is there, and his power and
authority are heavenly and divine. 2. His equipage: he is again described as
sitting
on a white horse, to show the equity of the cause, and certainty
of success. 3. His attributes: he is
faithful and true to his covenant
and promise, he is righteous in all his judicial and military proceedings, he
has a penetrating insight into all the strength and stratagems of his enemies,
he has a large and extensive dominion, many crowns, for he is
King of kings,
and Lord of lords. 4. His armour; and that is
a vesture dipped in blood,
either his own blood, by which he purchased this mediatorial power, or the blood
of his enemies, over whom he has always prevailed. 5. His name:
The Word of
God, a name that none fully knows but himself, only this we know, that this
Word
was God manifest in the flesh; but his perfections are incomprehensible by
any creature.
II. The army which he commands (v. 14), a very large one, made
up of many armies; angels and saints followed his conduct, and resembled him in
their equipage, and in their armour of purity and righteousnesschosen, and
called, and faithful.
III. The weapons of his warfare
A sharp sword
proceeding from
his mouth (v. 15), with which
he smites the nations,
either the threatenings of the written word, which now he is going to execute,
or rather his word of command calling on his followers to take a just revenge on
his and their enemies, who are now put into the wine-press of the wrath of God,
to be trodden under foot by him.
IV. The ensigns of his authority, his coat of arms
a name
written on his vesture and thigh, King of kings, and Lord of lords,
asserting his authority and power, and the cause of the quarrel, v. 16.
V. An invitation given
to the fowls of heaven, that they
should come and see the battle, and share in the spoil and pillage of the field
(v. 17, 18), intimating that this great decisive engagement should leave the
enemies of the church a feast for the birds of prey, and that all the world
should have cause to rejoice in the issue of it.
VI. The battle joined. The enemy falls on with great fury,
headed by
the beast, and the kings of the earth; the powers of earth and
hell gathered, to make their utmost effort, v. 19.
VII. The victory gained by the great and glorious head of the
church:
The beast and the false prophet, the leaders of the army, are
taken prisoners, both he who led them by power and he who led them by policy and
falsehood; these are taken and
cast into the burning lake, made incapable
of molesting the church of God any more; and their followers, whether officers
or common soldiers, are given up to military execution, and made a feast for
the
fowls of heaven. Though the divine vengeance will chiefly fall upon
the
beast, and the false prophet, yet it will be no excuse to those who fight
under their banner that they only followed their leaders and obeyed their
command; since they would fight for them, they must fall and perish with them.
Be
wise now therefore, O you kings, be instructed, you rulers of the earth; kiss
the Son, lest he be angry, and you perish from the way, Ps. 2:10, 12.
Chapter 19:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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