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
Complete Concise
We have already seen what occurred upon opening six of the
seals; we now come to the opening of the seventh, which introduced the sounding
of the seven trumpets; and a direful scene now opens. Most expositors agree that
the seven seals represent the interval between the apostle's time and the
reign of Constantine, but that the seven trumpets are designed to represent the
rise of antichrist, some time after the empire became Christian. In this chapter
we have, I. The preface, or prelude, to the sounding of the trumpets (v. 1-6).
II. The sounding of four of the trumpets (v. 7, etc.).
Verses 1-6
In these verses we have the prelude to the sounding of the
trumpets in several parts.
I. The opening of the last seal. This was to introduce a new set
of prophetical iconisms and events; there is a continued chain of providence,
one part linked to another (where one ends another begins), and, though they may
differ in nature and in time, they all make up one wise, well-connected, uniform
design in the hand of God.
II. A profound
silence in heaven for the space of half an
hour, which may be understood either, 1. Of the silence of peace, that for
this time no complaints were sent up to the ear of the Lord God of sabaoth; all
was quiet and well in the church, and therefore all silent in heaven, for
whenever the church on earth cries, through oppression, that cry comes up to
heaven and resounds there; or, 2. A silence of expectation; great things were
upon the wheel of providence, and the church of God, both in heaven and earth,
stood silent, as became them, to see what God was doing, according to that of
Zec. 2:13,
Be silent, O all flesh, before the Lord, for he has risen up out
of his holy habitation. And elsewhere,
Be still, and know that I am God.
III. The trumpets were delivered to the angels who were to sound
them. Still the angels are employed as the wise and willing instruments of
divine Providence, and they are furnished with all their materials and
instructions from God our Saviour. As the angels of the churches are to sound
the trumpet of the gospel, the angels of heaven are to sound the trumpet of
Providence, and every one has his part given him.
IV. To prepare for this, another angel must first offer incense,
v. 3. It is very probable that this other angel is the Lord Jesus, the high
priest of the church, who is here described in his sacerdotal office, having a
golden censer and much incense, a fulness of merit in his own glorious person,
and this incense he was to offer up,
with the prayers of all the saints, upon
the golden altar of his divine nature. Observe, 1. All the saints are a
praying people; none of the children of God are born dumb, a Spirit of grace is
always a Spirit of adoption and supplication, teaching us to cry,
Abba,
Father. Ps. 32:6,
For this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee.
2. Times of danger should be praying times, and so should times of great
expectation; both our fears and our hopes should put us upon prayer, and, where
the interest of the church of God is deeply concerned, the hearts of the people
of God in prayer should be greatly enlarged. 3. The prayers of the saints
themselves stand in need of the incense and intercession of Christ to make them
acceptable and effectual, and there is provision made by Christ for that
purpose; he has his incense, his censer, and his altar; he is all himself to his
people. 4. The prayers of the saints come up before God in a cloud of incense;
no prayer, thus recommended, was ever denied audience or acceptance. 5. These
prayers that were thus accepted in heaven produced great changes upon earth in
return to them; the same angel that in his censer offered up the prayers of the
saints in the same censer
took of the fire of the altar, and cast it into the
earth, and this presently caused strange commotions,
voices, and
thunderings, and lightnings, and an earthquake; these were the answers God
gave to the prayers of the saints, and tokens of his anger against the world and
that he would do great things to avenge himself and his people of their enemies;
and now, all things being thus prepared, the angels discharge their duty.
Verses 7-13
Observe, I.
The first angel sounded the first trumpet,
and the events which followed were very dismal:
There followed hail and fire
mingled with blood, etc., v. 7. There was a terrible storm; but whether it
is to be understood of a storm of heresies, a mixture of monstrous errors
falling on the church (for in that age Arianism prevailed), or a storm or
tempest of war falling on the civil state, expositors are not agreed. Mr. Mede
takes it to be meant of the Gothic inundation that broke in upon the empire in
the year 395, the same year that Theodosius died, when the northern nations,
under Alaricus, king of the Goths, broke in upon the western parts of the
empire. However, here we observe, 1. It was a very terrible storm-fire, and
hail, and blood: a strange mixture! 2. The limitation of it: it fell on
the
third part of the trees, and on the third part of
the grass, and
blasted and burnt it up; that is, say some, upon
the third part of the clergy
and
the third part of the laity; or, as others who take it to fall upon
the civil state, upon
the third part of the great men, and upon
the
third part of the common people, either upon the Roman empire itself, which
was a third part of the then known world, or upon a third part of that empire.
The most severe calamities have their bounds and limits set them by the great
God.
II.
The second angel sounded, and the alarm was followed,
as in the first, with terrible events:
A great mountain burning with fire was
cast into the sea; and the third part of the sea became blood, v. 8. By this
mountain some understand the leader or leaders of the heretics; others, as Mr.
Mede, the city of Rome, which was five times sacked by the Goths and Vandals,
within the compass of 137 years; first by Alaricus, in the year 410, with great
slaughter and cruelty. In these calamities, a third part of the people (called
here the sea or collection of waters) were destroyed: here was still a
limitation to the third part, for
in the midst of judgment God remembers
mercy. This storm fell heavy upon the maritime and merchandizing cities and
countries of the Roman empire.
III.
The third angel sounded, and the alarm had the like
effects as before:
There fell a great star from heaven, etc., v. 10. Some
take this to be a political star, some eminent governor, and they apply it to
Augustulus, who was forced to resign the empire to Odoacer, in the year 480.
Others take it to be an ecclesiastical star, some eminent person in the church,
compared to a
burning lamp, and they fix it upon Pelagius, who proved
about this time a falling star, and greatly corrupted the churches of Christ.
Observe, 1. Where this star fell:
Upon a third part of the rivers, and upon
the fountains of waters. 2. What effect it had upon them; it turned those
springs and streams into wormwood, made them very bitter, that men were poisoned
by them; either the laws, which are springs of civil liberty, and property, and
safety, were poisoned by arbitrary power, or the doctrines of the gospel, the
springs of spiritual life, refreshment, and vigour to the souls of men, were so
corrupted and embittered by a mixture of dangerous errors that the souls of men
found their ruin where they sought for their refreshment.
IV.
The fourth angel sounded, and the alarm was followed
with further calamities. Observe, 1. The nature of this calamity; it was
darkness; it fell therefore upon the great luminaries of the heaven, that give
light to the world
the sun, and the moon, and the stars, either the
guides and governors of the church, or of the state, who are placed in higher
orbs than the people, and are to dispense light and benign influences to them.
2. The limitation: it was confined to a third part of these luminaries; there
was some light both of the sun by day, and of the moon and stars by night, but
it was only a third part of what they had before. Without determining what is
matter of controversy in these points among learned men, we rather choose to
make these plain and practical remarks:(1.) Where the gospel comes to a
people, and is but coldly received, and has not its proper effects upon their
hearts and lives, it is usually followed with dreadful judgments. (2.) God gives
warning to men of his judgments before he sends them; he sounds an alarm by the
written word, by ministers, by men's own consciences, and by the signs of the
times; so that, if a people be surprised, it is their own fault. (3.) The anger
of God against a people makes dreadful work among them; it embitters all their
comforts, and makes even life itself bitter and burdensome. (4.) God does not in
this world stir up all his wrath, but sets bounds to the most terrible
judgments. (5.) Corruptions of doctrine and worship in the church are themselves
great judgments, and the usual causes and tokens of other judgments coming on a
people.
V. Before the other three trumpets are sounded here is solemn
warning given to the world how terrible the calamities would be that should
follow them, and how miserable those times and places would be on which they
fell, v. 13. 1. The messenger was
an angel flying in the midst of heaven,
as in haste, and coming on an awful errand. 2. The message was a denunciation of
further and greater woe and misery than the world had hitherto endured. Here are
three woes, to show how much the calamities coming should exceed those that had
been already, or to hint how every one of the three succeeding trumpets should
introduce its particular and distinct calamity. If less judgments do not take
effect, but the church and the world grow worse under them, they must expect
greater.
God will be known by the judgments that he executes; and he
expects, when he comes to punish the world, the inhabitants thereof should
tremble before him.
Chapter 8:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGee
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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Jude
Revelation
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