(Revelation, Chapters vi.-viii.)
“God Almighty! King of nations! earth
Thy footstool, heaven Thy throne!
Thine the greatness, power, and glory, Thine
the kingdom, Lord, alone!
Life and death are in Thy keeping, and Thy will
ordaineth all:
From the armies of Thy heavens to an unseen
insect’s fall.
“Reigning, guiding, all-commanding, ruling
myriad worlds of light;
Now exalting, now abasing, none can stay Thy
hand of might!
Working all things by Thy power, by the counsel
of Thy will.
Thou art God! enough to know it, and to hear
Thy word: ‘Be still!’
“In Thy sovereignty rejoicing, we Thy
children bow and praise,
For we know that kind and loving, just and true,
are all Thy ways.
While Thy heart of sovereign mercy, and Thy
arm of sovereign might,
For our great and strong salvation in Thy sovereign
grace unite.”
The Area of the Storm.
Goodness arouses evil. Faithfulness
to Christ stirs opposition. This is a commonplace.
A piece of white-hot metal plunged into cold water
makes a great fuss. Two areas of sharply different
temperatures in the atmosphere above us coming suddenly
together make a storm.
Purity entering an atmosphere of impurity
and insisting on staying, and on keeping pure, creates
a lively disturbance. The tempter was aroused
to his subtlest effort when Jesus appeared. There
is no such demoniac activity recorded as when Jesus
walked among men.
So crowning a king arouses opposition,
if there be opposition. And the active taking
of the reins of government has intensified the opposition
when it was strong enough to make a stand. The
striking illustration of this in the Bible is King
David. After Saul’s death the men of Judah
anointed David king. That was the signal for an
immediate attack by the chief of the forces of Saul’s
house. And this was succeeded by a long war,
before David was acknowledged as king over all Israel.
The clearing-up storm in his realm lasted a good while
before good weather came.
Here in this Revelation scene we have
been looking at our Lord Jesus is represented as stepping
forward to take possession of His realm. It is
natural to expect a storm. This will be a signal
to the opposition to rally all its power. But
there can be no question about the outcome of such
a set-to. That storm proves to be a clearing-up
storm in the realm. It is to be followed by such
fine moral weather as has not been known before.
But the storm itself proves to be a terrific one for
the earth while it lasts.
The greater part of this little end-book
is taken up with a description of that storm.
But before we turn to this book itself and its storm,
we want to get our bearings a bit, so as to understand
better what is here. Revelation is the knot in
the end of a big bunch of threads. We shall understand
the knot better by knowing more about the threads before
they are tied into the knot.
The storm area proves to be very large.
It takes in the whole earth. The Bible is a big
book in its outlook and grasp. It deals with the
whole earth, and the whole race. The thoughtful
Bible student comes to have a broad outlook, as well
as a close lookout about his own front and back doors.
It is fascinating to study the geography
of the Bible. We talk about the world growing
smaller. That refers of course to the rapidity
of transit. It is only within a few hundred years
that we have learned of the earth being round.
The Bible map includes practically the whole world
as we have come to know it.
The centre of the world as seen on
this map may seem a little surprising. We Americans
feel that the centre of things is here.
The Englishman knows that it is in London;
and lately the Germans have had the same exclusive
sort of knowledge about Berlin. The Chinese has
long called his country “the Middle Kingdom,”
in the sense of its being the central kingdom about
which the rest of the world revolves. But here
the centre is seen to be on the boundary line, practically,
between Orient and Occident, reaching out an embracing
arm to each.
We have a broad division of the earth
into East and West. The differences between the
two, in civilization, mode of thought, religion, language,
and so on, are so radical as to make it seem that there
was no point of contact. At least this has been
emphasized much by western writers on the East.
We are disturbed just now here in the far West over
the Oriental, Chinese Japanese and Indian crossing
the far boundary line between Orient and Occident
and coming into the United States and Canada.
Yet East and West have always overlapped
at the middle boundary line. There is
a great mixture of races in the strip where the eastern
edge of the West and the western edge of the East
come together. It is the strip running roughly
north and south where Russia’s western border
and Turkey’s touch Germany and Austria and Greece,
including the never-at-rest Balkan Peninsula.
Constantinople sits on the dividing line between East
and West, with the worst of both civilizations within
her confines. Here the hemispheres touch and
their life currents intermingle and flow together.
Scientific research seems to find
good evidence that all our European civilization,
which of course means American too, may have been brought
over by Eastern immigrants from central Asia long ages
ago, Asia coming into Europe. Perhaps we Westerners
would not despise the Easterners so contemptuously
and patronizingly if we knew how much we are probably
indebted to them for our civilization as well as for
our Hebrew and Christian faith, our Bible, and the
Christian restraining bulwarks of our common life.
The old common point of contact between
Orient and Occident was the strip of land forming
the western edge of the Orient at the eastern end
of the Mediterranean. Palestine has been for centuries
the common roadway of all nations, East and West.
No bit of earth has been so tramped and trampled by
the feet of all nations and races. This has been
the battlefield of the nations through long centuries.
The ends of the earth have met here. It is interesting
that the waters that wash its western shore are called
the Mediterranean Sea, that is, the middle-of-the-earth
sea.
Here then is the centre of the map.
It is the centre of all things in the Bible.
And it has proven to be at the centre of human action
through history, attested by the very name given to
the chief body of water there.
Jerusalem, the capital city of this
Palestine strip, was the centre of a world power in
the early ages. It has been the world capital.
And it has in turn been fought over and conquered
by every world power. No city has been a world
centre of action during as long a stretch of time,
and to as many different nations.
Out from this centre the action of
the Bible reaches north to Russia, south to Africa
(Ethiopia), east to China (Sinim, Isaiah xli,
and west to Spain. That practically includes
the world of our day. America is of course merely
a transplanted seedling of Europe.
Those great Hebrew leaders called
prophets had a world outlook. They were world
messengers. It is intensely interesting to take
a piece of paper, and pencil a rough map of the nations
named in their messages, notably Isaiah, Jeremiah,
Ezekiel, and Daniel. Beginning at Jerusalem
and Israel they reach first this way, then that, up
and down, back and forth, until the whole world of
action of that day has been touched. They were
men of world size. They had a world outlook and
a world message.
But then God’s man always has.
The world outlook of Jesus was tremendous. And
every true disciple of Jesus Christ has the world
outlook. Grace broadens as well as refining.
It is one of the endless outworkings of sin that tends
toward that narrowing provincialism which everywhere
hinders so much, and so intensely.
Now in this world map in the Bible
geography two cities stand out beyond all others,
Jerusalem and Babylon; Jerusalem the centre of God’s
people and of God’s plans, Babylon the centre
of the opposing worldly power. These are the
two outstanding cities of the Bible world.
Between these two there is an enmity
and warfare that is practically continuous. Jerusalem
comes to be the typical of God’s people and power
and kingdom. Babylon stands out likewise as typical
of the power and kingdom always and innately opposed
to God and to His people. The conflict between
the two seems irrepressible and irreconcilable.
It is never out of view.
Babylon has been the centre, under
successive dynasties, of a world empire, including
not only part of Asia, but reaching west to Europe
and south to Africa. It sat practically in the
connecting strip of Orient and Occident, ruling over
both. In the dim dawn of history a God-ignoring,
and so really a God-defying and man-exalting movement,
centred in the city called Babel. And from that
time on that city, and its successor Babylon, have
seemed as though possessed with a spirit of antagonism
to God and His people. It is as though it were
the earthly headquarters of the blasphemous unseen
evil forces.
This is a simple bit of geography
lesson in the Old Testament. This is the map
that lies ever open in these older pages, with its
two capital cities marked large. And this indicates
the area of the storm, and the two central points
where its outburst will centre.
Studying the Weather Forecast.
It is interesting to find a weather
forecast of this storm. The old Hebrew prophets
were close students of national and world-wide weather
conditions, and much given to making forecasts of impending
storms. Even in the New Testament there is this
distinct prophetic or foretelling strain running throughout.
The father of John the Baptist is told of his son’s
birth; and Mary, of the unusual birth of her divine
Son. The disciples are told of the coming of
the Holy Spirit. And Agabus tells of a great
famine coming. In these instances the fulfilment
follows soon after the event is foretold.
The destruction of Jerusalem, foretold
by Christ, had at least a part of its fulfilment in
the terrible Titus siege of 70 A.D. Our Lord said
that He would return to earth in great glory, and
that there would come a great tribulation to all the
earth, and repeated the old prophecy of a restoration
of the Hebrew kingdom. These have not yet occurred.
But the book of the Revelation is
distinctively the prophetic book of the New Testament.
It deals almost entirely with events that are yet to
come. It would be natural that it would fit into
the prophetic parts of the Old Testament. So
that one who is somewhat familiar with the prophetic
books of the Old naturally comes more intelligently
to this prophetic book of the New.
It is true that most of us have a
sense of bewilderment about prophecy. We seem
to feel that it requires great scholarship and profound
study, and that an understanding of it is not possible
to the common run of Christians. And so we largely
leave it out as not understandable.
Yet prophecy is simply God’s
plans for the future, together with a revelation of
other events which are not in His plan, but which He
sees will happen in the future. In it He tells
us what He means us to understand. And more than
this, our understanding will have practical bearing
on our attitude toward evil and compromise. It
will affect our faith, making it steadier, especially
when evil seems triumphant and overbearing. It
will make our prayer more intelligent and confident.
There are certain things we all know.
As we read back into these pages we know that the
break-up of the Jewish nation, which began with the
Babylonian Captivity, came to a terrible climax in
a complete break-up after the rejection of Christ.
We know that the other nations commonly called Gentiles
(i.e., the nations) have had supremacy in the
earth. Israel was at one time acknowledged as
the great world power, with many subject nations,
in Solomon’s time.
But Gentile supremacy begins back
in the time of these Old Testament pages. There
is to-day practically no belief that this will ever
be changed, except perhaps by a stray Jew here and
there, who still holds to his old Bible, and except
by those Christians who discern God’s plan,
and believe both in Him and in it.
In the absence of an understanding
of that plan of God, it has been common to apply all
the glowing prophetic Hebrew promises to the Church.
The result has been that Israel and the Kingdom have
been confused in our minds with the Church. And
this has become the commonplace in the common Church
consciousness.
It is quite possible for the person
of average good sense to get something of a simple,
broad grasp of the prophetic books. It involves
reading repeatedly so as to get familiar with
the contents, and rapidly so as not to get
too much absorbed in details.
It is needful to use a common-sense
interpretation in getting at the meaning. It
is a simple law that one principle of interpretation
should be applied uniformly and consistently to all
parts of any one document. If I say arbitrarily,
“this part is rhetorical; it doesn’t mean
just what it says, but something else; and this other
part means just what it says,” clearly I am
reading my own ideas and prejudices into the book.
It is much slower, and takes more
pains and patience, to keep at it until all parts
gradually clear up to us, first this bit, then that,
until part fits part, and all hang together. But
there is great fascination in it, and one’s
reverence for this revelation of God’s Word
grows deeper.
Of course there is rhetorical language
here as everywhere. “The Lord is my shepherd”
is clearly rhetorical. For God is not a shepherd,
and I am not a sheep, but a man. But under this
simple, clearly rhetorical language the tender, personal
relationship God bears to me is beautifully expressed.
That such language is rhetorical is clear to
every mind alike.
And there is a picture language here,
such as speaking of purity of character as “white
garments.” The honest, earnest, unprejudiced
seeker after truth quickly recognizes these, and learns
to become skilled in discerning what is meant.
We come to see that Israel means Israel, not the Church.
Jerusalem means that city in Judea, and so on.
Of course it is needful that there
be an openmindedness, a humble, teachable
spirit, willing to accept the real truth, no matter
how it may shake up one’s prejudices and prearranged
schemes of thought. And, above all, there should
be a constant prayerfulness of spirit, to learn
just what our God is seeking to have us know.
Of course there are depths here for the scholarly,
profound minds. But we ordinary folk can get
a simple, clear grasp of God’s plan and revealed
insight into the future if we go at it in this thoughtful,
prayerful way. And it will be a great help to
us to do so.
Three Great Unfulfilled Events.
Let us take a swift glance at these
prophetic books of the Old Testament. It helps
to remember the natural way in which these prophetic
books grew up. These prophets were preachers and
teachers. Here are some people going up to the
temple service one day in Jerusalem. As they get
near the temple they notice a little knot of people
standing yonder at a corner listening to a man talking
earnestly. Isaiah, fresh from the presence of
God, is talking out of a burning heart to the crowd.
A visitor from another part of the
land says curiously to his companion, “What’s
that?” The other replies: “Oh, it’s
only Isaiah talking to the people. He is a good
man, that Isaiah, a well-meaning, earnest man, but
a little too intense, I fear.” And they
pass on to the temple service. By and by Isaiah
stops. The moving congregation scatters.
He slips quietly down to his house, and under the
Spirit’s holy, brooding presence writes down
a part of what he has been saying. So there grew
up the rolls to which his name is attached.
In some such simple, natural way these
prophetic books grew up, always under the Holy Spirit’s
guidance and control. They are full of intense
fire, and of the homely talk of street and market and
fireside. There are two sorts of these prophets,
the preachers like Elijah and Elisha and those who
wrote as well as spoke, and whose names are preserved
in these books.
There are seventeen of these little
books. They fall easily into four groups.
The first group contains those belonging in
the time before the nation was exiled. It is
a period of about one hundred and fifty years, roughly,
beginning in the prosperous reign of Uzziah and running
up to the time when the nation was taken captive to
Babylon. Isaiah is the most prominent prophet
of this period, and with him are Hosea, Micah, and
Amos, all of whom may have been personally acquainted;
and also Zephaniah and Habakkuk.
The second is the exile
group, Jeremiah preaching in Judah, before and
during the siege, and to the remnant left behind in
the land; and Ezekiel and Daniel bearing their witness
among the exiles in the foreign land.
The third group is made up
of those who witnessed after the people are allowed
to return to their own land again. The writer
of the second part of Isaiah probably preached to
the people as the opportunity came to return to Jerusalem.
Haggai and Zachariah stirred up the returned people
to rebuild the temple. Joel and Malachi witnessed
probably a little later in the same period.
The fourth is the foreign
group. Obadiah sends a message to the neighbouring
nation of Edom; and Jonah and Nahum are sent with messages
to Nineveh. If one will try to make a picture
of these people and events by reading the historical
books, and then watch and listen as the prophets talk,
it will do much to make these prophetic books full
of the native atmosphere in which they grew up.
Now there are three things that gradually
come to stand out in these prophetic books. Much
of what is being said is of immediate application.
It refers plainly to affairs being lived out then.
Then certain things are plainly fulfilled in the coming
of Christ. And again there is a great deal that
clearly has never been fulfilled but is still future.
It is the latter part that naturally is of intensest
interest.
Now in this latter part, dealing with
the future, three things stand out clear and
sharp above the rest. There is to be judgment
upon Israel for their iniquities. The changes
on this are rung again and again. And this stands
out as much in the preaching of the Captivity time,
and of the Return, as before the Captivity. But
in the midst of severest judgment there will be a
remnant spared. The tree is cut down, but
the stump is spared; and there is life in the stump.
But above these there stand out these three things.
The first thing stands out
big. It is the thing the nation never forgot.
The believing Hebrew still clings to it. The wailers
at the wall of Jerusalem to-day never forget it.
It is this: there is to be a future time of
great glory for the nation of Israel in their own loved
land. The kingdom is to be restored, but with
a glory indescribably greater than ever known.
This is the bright golden thread, thick and strong,
running through from end to end.
It will come through that spared remnant.
The old stump will put out a new shoot. It will
be through the coming of a great king, who will prove
to be their greatest king, and will reign not
only over Israel, but over all nations as tributary
to Israel, with Jerusalem as the capital city both
of Israel and of the whole earth. At its beginning
there will be a gathering of Israel from among all
the nations where they have been scattered. To
assist these scattered pilgrims to get to their own
land, the tongue of the Egyptian sea on the southwest
is to be destroyed; and the waters of the Euphrates
on the extreme east are to be so scattered or dried
up that men can walk over dry-shod.
When the great king comes there will
be genuine penitence among the people over their past
sins, and they will become a wholly changed people.
Israel will be a nation converted by the power of the
Holy Spirit through the conversion of the people individually.
There will be at this time a resurrection of God’s
people who have died.
The new reign and kingdom is to be
one of great spiritual enlightenment to all nations.
There will be everywhere a new, remarkable openmindedness
to God and His truth. And there will be the same
visible evidence of the presence of God at Jerusalem
as when the pillar of fire and cloud was with them
in the wilderness. That wondrous presence-cloud
is to be always in view.
This sounds to our ears like the highly
coloured visionary dream of some over-enthusiastic
Hebrew. Yet this is a calm statement of what is
found here. And be it keenly marked, it is a
picture which the godly Hebrew of the old time never
lost sight of. This is the first thing that
stands out in these prophetic pages.
The second thing stands out
distinctly. Preceding this wondrous kingdom the
earth will be visited by terrible judgments.
There is an awfully dark shadow before the blaze of
light breaks out. A terrific storm will come
before the sun shines out in its new strength.
All nations will combine to make war against the Jew.
Their forces will be gathered at Jerusalem. At
the head of the coalition will be a power called Babylon.
There will come a terrific battle, victory for the
coalition will seem assured. The sufferings of
the Jews will be indescribable.
Then there will come a day never after
to be forgotten. In the midst of the indescribable
horrors of that battle, when things are at their worst
for the Jew, then comes the deliverance. Suddenly
Jehovah will appear out of the heavens, with a great
company of holy ones. His feet will stand upon
Mount Olivet to the east of Jerusalem. There will
be a terrible earthquake, and an equally terrific
shake-up of the heavenly bodies. The luminaries,
sun, moon, and stars, will be darkened. There
will be terrible judgments visited not only upon the
earth, but upon the evil spirit powers. Repeated
emphasis is put upon the judgment to be visited upon
Babylon.
All this will sound like a veritable
fairy tale to many who are not familiar with this
Book of God; the unlikeliest thing imaginable.
Yet this is the thing seriously set forth throughout
these old prophetic pages. I have given a few
references in footnotes. But these few scattered
passages of themselves will not give an adequate conception
of what these pages hold.
There is all the fascination of a
novel, and immensely more and deeper fascination than
any novel, in reading these prophetic pages repeatedly
in the way already spoken of till their mere contents
become somewhat familiar. Then taking paper and
pencil, running through again, and drawing off patiently
and carefully, item after item of these prophecies
plainly not yet fulfilled, and then slowly and painstakingly
put them together in what would be a simple, logical
order.
It will be helpful, in reading, to
remember that it is a common thing with these writers
to speak of a future thing as already past. It
is a bit of the intensity that sees the thing that
is yet to come as already accomplished. And one
should discern between the immediate thing that may
likely occur in that generation and the far-distant
thing. A careful noting of the language will
make the difference clear.
This is the second thing that stands
out, the visitation of judgments.
Then there is a third thing.
This terrible visitation of judgments comes in connection
with, and at the close of, a time of great persecution
of the Jew by the nations. Jeremiah speaks
of it as the time of Jacob’s trouble, and
the Man of Fire tells Daniel that there will be a
time of trouble such as never was since there was
a nation even to that same time. This persecution
of the Jew, and the visitation of judgments on the
earth as a deliverance from it, are connected with
the setting up of the Kingdom.
These are the three things that stand
dominantly out in these prophetic pages as distinctly-future,
the great Jew persecution unprecedented in intensity,
the visitation of terrible judgments on the earth,
and the coming of a glorious kingdom. And the
three are connected. We know that no events have
yet taken place that at all satisfy the language used
of these three connected events.
This is the simple outline of expected
coming events with which the thoughtful reader of
God’s Word is supposed to be familiar. The
reverent student of God’s promises and plans
and revelations would naturally have all this clear
and fresh in his mind as he turns to open the pages
of the prophetic book of the New Testament.
Forecast of the Great Storm.
Now it is of intense interest
to note that our Lord Jesus speaks of these same three
things, at much length, and with much emphasis; the
persecution, the visitation of judgments, and the kingdom.
It came to me as a great surprise and with startling
force when I realized, after gathering out this summary
from the Old Testament, that the three things that
stand out so sharply there are the very things Jesus
speaks of here with such fulness and emphasis.
He puts special emphasis on the time
of persecution as of unprecedented horror and ferocity.
He plainly indicates that this will be directed not
only against the Jew, but against His own followers.
Three times this talk of His on Olivet just before
His death is given at much length. That talk
is given to a little group of Jewish disciples who
have broken with the Jewish leaders, and who become
the great leaders of the Church formed at Pentecost.
He speaks of that terrible experience
as “great tribulation," “such as
there hath not been the like from the beginning of
the creation which God created until now, nor ever
shall be." We shall find it spoken of in this
book of Revelation as “the tribulation, the great
one." It has come to be spoken of commonly as
“the tribulation” and “the great
tribulation.”
With all this fresh in mind, a run
back through the Old Testament brings out that it
is spoken of there much more than we may have realized.
The warning to Israel, at Sinai, as they made the
covenant of allegiance with God, of the bitter punishment
that would come if they were untrue, has seemed many
times as though couched in very intense, almost extreme
language. But it is found to fit into these later
descriptions of this great tribulation to come.
That warning is repeated, in as intense words and
with a greater fulness, by Moses in his series of farewell
talks in the Plains of Moab, and it runs through
the song he left for their use.
The experiences of the people of Israel
in Egypt are found to be an illustration of the coming
experience at the end, great persecution and suffering,
then great deliverance through a visitation of judgment
upon their persecutors, and great revelation of God’s
glory following. And the experience of the three
young Hebrew exiles in Babylon comes to mind.
They went through the fire, seven times heated, and
they had a marvellous deliverance, and then high promotion.
Certain Psalms shine with new light
in the light of this terrible truth. Chief among
these is the Ninety-first. Quite likely it grew
up out of the experience of Israel at the last before
leaving Egypt. It, of course, has its practical
use in one’s daily life. But the vividness
and intensity of its meaning will probably never be
realized as during the coming tribulation days.
Nor will the exultant note running through the nine
Psalms immediately following it be appreciated as by
those experiencing deliverance when the tribulation
is over. The Forty-sixth Psalm, and the Psalms
of praise immediately following it, likewise seem
to get new light.
It is quite probable that very much,
all through this Book of Psalms, will be understood
and appreciated fully only by the generation of God’s
people that go through the tribulation and know the
deliverance following. Much of the old Book of
God is quite meaningless to the Christian who has
had no tribulation experience. That is,
I mean who has never known opposition in his Christian
faith, or who has slipped easily along when there
is opposition.
The outstanding features in the Old
Testament of this great experience are terrible persecution
of the Jew, deliverance at the very worst pitch of
extremity, by a visitation of judgment on their enemies,
and by Jehovah coming in person for their deliverance;
and then the great Kingdom following.
The outstanding features spoken of
by our Lord Jesus in His Olivet talk agree with this,
but go much more into detail, especially about the
tribulation. The tribulation will be preceded
by wars, rumors of wars, famines, earthquakes, and
persecution. There will be many false religious
teachers, many Christians untrue to their faith, and
a great increase of wickedness. This is a sort
of foreshadowing.
The tribulation itself will find all
this enormously intensified. It will begin
with some astonishing act of blasphemy in the temple
in Jerusalem, run its terrible course, and close with
a series of judgment-events, earthquake, heavens shaken,
and great distress, ending in the visible appearance
of the Lord Jesus Himself, out of heaven on the clouds.
And this will be a signal for great penitential mourning
among the people on the earth.
This, then, is the simple, broad outline
with which the thoughtful reader of God’s Word
would naturally be familiar as he turns to this prophetic
book at the end to get our Lord’s last message
to His followers.
Getting a Broad, Clear Outlook.
As we turn now again to the book of
Revelation it will help us to remember the general
plan followed in its writing. It is like a series
of dissolving views of the same scene, each of which
lets us see the same thing from a different point
of view.
This is a simple teaching rule for
getting a clear grasp of what is being taught.
We are familiar with it in the Bible. The story
of creation is told in the first chapter of Genesis,
and then told again in the second chapter with details
not given in the first, the two together presenting
the complete story. The historical books of Chronicles
present one view of the kingdom of Israel, the official.
The books of the Kings give another look at the same
period; and the prophetic books a wholly different
view as seen by these rarely spiritually minded men
of God. Daniel is shown four visions of future
events, all covering the same general stretch of events,
but with a fuller description, here of one part and
there of another. The four Gospels are a familiar
illustration of the same principle in teaching and
story-telling. This is the plan followed here.
I was impressed anew with the practical
value of this method one day in St. Petersburg.
We had gone to look at the panorama of the siege of
Sebastopol, then on exhibition in a huge, round building.
It will be remembered that the British and French
allied themselves with Turkey and Sardinia in an attempt
to restrain the encroachments of Russia on Turkish
territory. The famous charge of Balaklava, immortalized
by Tennyson, is remembered as the most stirring event
of that war. Its chief event was the siege of
Sebastopol on the Crimea peninsula, in the Black Sea.
At the panorama we stood as though
on a high central point in the city of Sebastopol,
with the view spreading out in all directions.
To the north lay the harbour with the Russian ships
securely bottled in by the attacking fleets.
To the west a body of French soldiers were retreating,
hotly pursued by Russian troops, while in the distance
British troops are hurrying to the relief of the French.
Then we looked east, where the fighting
was going on at close range, the wounded being carried
away and the reserves hastening up to take their places.
And again we turned to the south, where the battle
raged fiercest. The face of the commanding officer
stood out so vividly. And we almost shrank from
the fierceness of the fire. And the smell of
powder almost seemed stifling.
And as I stood brooding afresh on
the horrors of inhuman war, I was tremendously impressed
that only by such successive views could I get such
a grasp of that memorable siege. I had a more
intelligent and vivid understanding of it than ever
before.
And so it is that we may get a simple,
clear, and real grasp of the tremendous tribulation
time that is coming, that it is presented to us in
this fashion, first one distinct view, then another,
and another, till some understanding of the whole
begins to get hold of us.
We have seen the Lord Jesus, in the
vision in chapters four and five, as He comes forward
to take an advance step. We have seen the tremendous
outburst of praise in heaven as He steps forward.
This step and scene are in heaven. The earth
is wholly unaware of it at that moment.
Now all that follows is connected
directly with that advance step. This is the
significant thing to get clearly fixed in mind.
At the present time our Lord Jesus is still walking
among the candlestick Churches watching and waiting.
We are still in that waiting time. The Holy Spirit
still dwells in the Church on earth.
At some time in the future, no one
knows, nor can know, just when, the Lord Jesus will
rise up in readiness for an advance move. He will
withdraw the Holy Spirit from the Church up into His
presence again “before the throne.” Then
in connection with this advance step there will
occur on the earth the things spoken of in these pages
following. This is the tremendous fact to keep
clear, the immediate connection between these happenings
on earth and His new move in heaven.
We come now to these happenings on
earth. There are seven distinct views given here
in this section, chapters six to the end of the book.
There is a great detail in description which it would
be both instructive and interesting to study out.
But we want to get at the essential things. And
so we will give our time and thought to these essentials.
Our Lord Jesus is represented as about
to take possession of His realm. The first step
is a dispossessing of the claimants in possession.
This furnishes the key to what follows. The descriptions
are of the process of cleaning out the evil forces.
At the close of this we find Him taking possession
(in chapter twenty) and reigning over the earth.
These descriptions make it clear at
once that this is the tribulation so much spoken of
in these preceding pages. What follows fits so
into what has been spoken of that the identification
seems complete. The thing our Lord Jesus is revealing
here tallies with what He had told John before on
Olivet.
There comes first a general description
of the whole period (chapters vi.-vii.). Then
follows a description of how these happenings
will come. It will be through the withdrawal
of restraint and so the loosening out of evil (chapters
viii.-ix.). During this whole period there will
be a special faithful witnessing on earth, in the midst
of the riot of evil, to God and His truth (chapter
xi.).
A detailed outline of the run of events
follows, giving much additional information, picturing
the rise and characteristics of the leader of the
tribulation time, and the manner of its close (chapters
xii.-xiv.). There follows this a description
of the judgments and the supreme contest with which
the period closes (chapters xv.-xvi.). There is
a description of the organized system of evil, and
then of the fall of the capital of the system (chapters
xvii.-xviii.) And then follows the actual coming of
our Lord Jesus, the setting up of the kingdom, and
subsequent events (chapters xix.-xxii.).
A General Look at the Storm and Its Close.
We turn now to the first of
these. It begins with a crowned One seated on
a white horse going forth conquering and to conquer.
This description agrees with the much fuller description
of the Lord Jesus near the end of the book, as he
goes to the earth for the decisive close of the tribulation.
This gives fresh emphasis to the fact
that what follows is the direct result of His advance
step. At once there follows on earth a time of
war, famine, death, and of persecution to the death
of God’s people. There is no hint as to
how long this goes on. It is brought to a close
with an earthquake and an equally terrific disturbance
of the heavens, the sun, moon, and stars, something
unknown before.
The utmost consternation is created
on earth. All conditions of men, crowned kings,
merchant princes, men of autocratic power financially
and politically and socially, join with the humblest
in hiding themselves in the great holes made by the
earthquake. They feel that the time of judgment
has come, and they are not ready for it.
The description of their terror tallies
remarkably with the prophetic language used by Isaiah,
even as the whole description fits into our Lord’s
Olivet talk. This is seen to be a general, rapid
vision of the whole tribulation period.
Then there follows what clearly seems
to be a parenthesis fitting in just before the great
earthquake. The earth and sea have been terribly
torn up by the earthquake. This parenthesis begins
with a command that the earth and sea be not hurt
until certain things have taken place.
This fits the two events of the parenthesis
in just before the ruinous earthquake takes place.
The two events are of a radically different sort from
what has just been told. They are thus put by
themselves, and the run of evil and of judgment upon
it, put by itself, so keeping these two quite clear,
following the general plan of the book.
There are two events in this parenthesis.
There is what is called the “sealing”
of a certain number of the Hebrew tribes on the
earth. Twelve thousand of each tribe are
sealed, making a total of one hundred and forty-four
thousand. The word “seal” is used
in two senses in the Bible, as a means of fastening
up a writing or roll, and, in the New Testament, commonly
for the presence of the Holy Spirit in a human life.
The seal in this second sense was
a mark of ownership. Paul tells us that we are
sealed with the Holy Spirit, so indicating that
we belong to the Lord Jesus, who gives us this evidence
of His ownership. If this simple, natural meaning
be taken here, it would mean that at this time the
Holy Spirit has been poured out upon the Jew.
The spiritual regeneration spoken of so frequently
in the prophetic pages takes place at this time.
The significance of the numbers should
be noticed. Twelve is the number commonly used
in the Bible, for corporate completeness, to indicate
that a group is complete. Twelve times twelve
would simply represent a fully completed corporate
number. That is to say, upon the entire body of
Jews then living on the earth the Holy Spirit is poured
out, thus marking them once again as God’s peculiar
people, restored fully to favour after the long national
rejection.
The second event is of equally intense
interest, indeed to us of non-Jewish birth it has
yet greater interest. John is up in heaven.
It is from that point of view that he sees. Now
he is suddenly startled. All at once there appears
before his eyes a group he had not seen before.
He describes it as a great multitude, actually countless,
out of all the peoples of the whole earth, a great
polyglot polyracial world company.
They are clothed in white, holding
the conqueror’s palm in their hands, and singing,
making wondrous music. John is getting another
taste of the music of heaven. And their singing
is a signal for a fresh outburst of praise by the
angels, the elders, and the living creatures.
All this seems to occur suddenly, this appearance
of this new company before the throne.
John gazes spellbound, wondering who
these are, and where they come from, and what this
means. And he is told that these are they that
come out of the tribulation, the great one, down on
the earth. Then in a few exquisitely tender,
heart-touching words their happiness is described.
These two events occur just before
the terrible earthquake and the shake-up of the earth’s
heavenly bodies. Just before the judgment that
closes the tribulation this double event takes place,
the conversion of the Jews, and the catching away
out of the tribulation distress on earth, up into
the presence of the throne, of the followers of our
Lord Jesus.
We remember that that great Jew, Paul,
was converted by the appearance of Jesus in the heavens
above him. We remember that in the Olivet talk
Jesus says that His followers will so be gathered up
to Himself at the time of His second coming.
These two events, taking place here, tell us what
has happened down on the earth. In his vision
John, being in heaven, sees these things as they appear
from above.
This is the first view of the tribulation.
It begins with the moment when our Lord Jesus up in
heaven begins action, describes the characteristics
of the tribulation on earth, and closes with the national
regeneration of Israel, and the catching up from earth
of Christ’s true followers.
Evil Let Loose.
The second view runs through
chapters eight and nine. Chapters ten and eleven
to the close of verse thirteen make a distinct parenthesis.
And then this view is picked up again at eleven, fourteen,
and runs to the close of that chapter. But this
final bit in chapter eleven is merely a connecting
link with what comes later. Practically the whole
of this view is in chapters eight and nine.
It closes with an earthquake, so connecting
it with the final event in the first view. It
begins with a period of prolonged silence, which would
seem to answer to the hush in the great volume of praise
in the first view, when the Lamb takes the sealed
roll. So it carries us back to the same starting-point
as there.
There is first a striking scene before
the throne, where John sees a golden altar. On
this there is being offered incense, which is said
to be added to the prayers of all the saints.
Incense and prayers rise together before God.
Then an angel pours some of the fire of this prayer-altar
into the earth, and a storm follows. So these
two views, first and second, have another common starting-point,
the beginning of a storm.
This is a very suggestive scene.
The prayers of all the saints, both in earth and heaven,
have a decided restraining influence over evil down
on earth at the present time. At the close they
will become a decisive influence in the cleaning-up
process on earth, and the bringing in of the new order.
Then follows a fourfold description
of distressing events on earth, which are caused by
fiery influences coming out of the heavens. The
language used seems to make clear that it is through
a loosening out of the powers of evil that the tribulation
comes.
In the picture language of the vision,
“a great mountain burning with fire was cast
into the sea,” with injurious results to water,
to life, and to shipping. A mountain is a common
figure in the Bible for a great ruling power.
So Israel is called by Isaiah. The seventeenth
chapter of Revelation speaks of seven kingdoms as seven
mountains. In Jeremiah, Babylon, which is spoken
of repeatedly and typically as being the embodiment
of evil and of opposition to God, is called: “O
destroying mountain ... which destroyest all the earth,
(I) will make of thee a burnt mountain." It speaks
here also of “a great star, burning as
a torch,” that fell upon the rivers and makes
them bitter as wormwood. These two things seem
to suggest clearly that the great hurt done to sea
and vegetation, to all life, and through the obscuring
of the heavenly lights, is a result directly of the
powers of evil having been loosened out.
The long restraint upon evil through
the presence of the Holy Spirit in the Church is now
withdrawn in the withdrawal of the Spirit. His
withdrawal is practically an answer to the tacit prayer
both of world and Church. That prayer is being
answered. The “One” who restraineth
has been withdrawn. This it is that makes the
tribulation on its negative side. The awful character
of the demons from the pit is so utterly beyond human
experience up to that time that there seem no adequate
words to describe them.
The Gospels are full of the awful
activity of demons on earth in possessing men.
In our own land there is not wanting plenty of evidence
of men horribly possessed by demons. In the older
countries of Europe this experience is much more marked.
But it is in heathen lands that it is most marked,
where even the very air seems charged with evil forces,
as though these unseen demons swarmed about.
Yet all this sort of thing is now
under restraint. What it will mean to have that
restraint withdrawn, and the horrid hordes here described
free to do as they will, no imagination can depict.
This is well called the first woe, and an awful
woe it will be. Mercifully there is a time limit
set on this demon activity.
Following this comes the loosing out
of another horde of demons, as difficult of description,
and yet more terrible. They seem countless, yet
there is a limit to their numbers. The supreme
Hand is never wholly withdrawn. These have power
to kill as well as to torment. This is the second
woe. It is most strikingly noticeable that neither
of these things has influence to make men penitent.
The last item of this view is given
in chapter x-19. The announcement is made
that the sovereignty of the world is transferred to
our Lord and His Christ. The temple of God is
seen open, and some further action takes place, but
the detail of it is reserved for another view.
Such is the terrible sight in the second view of the
tribulation time. Evil is loosened out, apparently
unrestrained, and yet under restraint. This it
is that makes the tribulation on its positive side.
The parenthesis in the description
of this view has been spoken of. It runs through
chapters ten and eleven to the close of verse thirteen,
and contains two chief things. The first is a
little group of three items. There is a fresh
description of our Lord Jesus as He is seen standing
with one foot on the sea and the other upon the earth,
and holding a little open book. Then seven thunders
roar out. John is about to write, but is told
not to. That terrific storm coming is far greater
than can be told. Then comes the solemn declaration
that there will be no further delay, but that at once
shall be finished up this terrible time of judgment.
Then follows a personal word to John. These three
items make up chapter ten.
God’s Faithful Witnesses.
Then comes the second thing, in chapter
eleven on to verse thirteen, which proves to be the
third view of the tribulation. It shows that
during the whole of this tribulation time there will
be a special faithful witness being borne to God and
His truth. As the Holy Spirit is being withdrawn
from the Church, these two men begin their special
ministry of witnessing.
The place of that witness will be
Jerusalem. But recent events will have brought
a greatly diversified population to that city from
all parts of the world. So that the witness becomes
world-wide in its immediate reach, and probably in
the reports of it that go out.
While there is good reason for thinking
that these two witnesses may be Enoch and Elijah,
the two men of Bible record, one before the Flood and
one after, who were distinctively God’s witnesses,
and were taken away without death, yet it is best
not to stop over a matter that has been and is apt
to be a matter of mere idle speculative talk.
The thing worthy of note is that as the Holy Spirit’s
distinctive witness is withdrawn there will be these
two special witnesses sent to Jerusalem for a witness
that will be world-wide in its extent and influence.
Such is God’s gracious patience and longsuffering.
These two men are clothed in mourning
as a part of their witness. They have miraculous
power in protecting themselves against attack, and
in withholding rain, and sending plagues among the
people, and in turning water into blood, to give force
and effect to their testimony. Their witness
continues through twelve hundred and sixty days.
John had already been told that Jerusalem
would be trodden under foot by the nations for forty-two
months. We are apt to think that it has been
trodden under foot or desecrated by the nations for
an immensely longer period. But prophecy never
gives any reckoning of time for Israel, except when
Israel is an organized nation. It is concerned
with telling Jewish national events.
At this time the Jews have their national
organization again in Palestine. For forty-two
months after the nation has been newly set up the
city will be so trodden under the desecrating feet
of the nations. This is the first hint of time
we have had. The witnessing and the desecration
of the holy city will continue side by side for three
and a half years.
At the end of this period evil will
be given full swing over these witnesses. They
are killed and their bodies left lying in the streets,
while the international crowds make merry because their
tormentors, as these two are called, are gone.
Then before the terror-stricken gaze of these crowds
the two men come to life, and are caught up into the
heavens. Is this the moment when all are caught
up? Quite possibly. Then comes the terrible
earthquake as at the end of the other two views.
The one distinctive thing told here
is that during the tribulation, in the midst of all
the blasphemous reign of unrestrained wickedness, there
will be the unbroken, faithful witnessing. This
seems to explain why the account comes as a parenthesis
in the account of the awful riot of evil. During
the worst of the evil there will go on unbroken the
faithful, gracious testimony of God’s truth
and love.
The Lawless Leader.
The fourth view takes the longest
sweep of any, thus far, goes into much more detail,
and gives much fresh information. It runs through
chapters twelve to fourteen. In the intensely
picturesque language of a woman arrayed in the most
glorious splendour and dignity and power imaginable
the nation of Israel is depicted.
This woman is with child. In
more intensely dramatic language Satan is pictured
as standing before the woman waiting to destroy her
child as soon as born. The child is born, a man-child,
who is to rule all the nations with autocratic sway.
He is caught up to heaven, and his mother flees into
the wilderness from the serpent. This is the opening
action of this view.
The meaning lies open on the face.
Israel gave birth to the man Jesus, who foiled all
the attacks of Satan and ascended to heaven. The
old prophetic characteristic of connecting events
far apart without reference to intervening time is
marked here. The long interval between the break-up
of the Jew nation and its taking shape again as a nation,
which has lasted nineteen hundred years roughly, comes
between the last word of verse five and the first
word of verse six.
The prophetic writing takes no reckoning
of Israel, except as a nation. The woman fleeing
into the wilderness is Israel organized again as a
nation suffering persecution. She is so persecuted
for twelve hundred and sixty days, but divinely protected
and preserved. Such is the first act of the drama
pictured here.
Then we are told why the woman
flees, that is, the explanation of this special persecution
of the Jew this time. Satan has had his headquarters
somewhere in the heavens, below God’s throne,
but above the earth. Now, after a conflict, he
is cast out of heaven, down to the earth. Here
is a third event that comes approximately at the beginning
of the tribulation time, Satan is cast down to the
earth.
The Holy Spirit is withdrawn from
the Church up to heaven, so removing the restraint
upon evil. Satan is cast out of heaven and comes
down to earth. Thus there is a double intensifying
of evil on the earth, the withdrawal of restraint,
and the presence of the evil one himself. And
as the witness of the Holy Spirit is withdrawn the
special witness of the two men in Jerusalem begins.
The defeat of Satan in this heavenly
conflict draws out a burst of praise from the upper
hosts. It is because of the great victory of our
Lord Jesus in His death that this victory is gotten.
They overcome because of the blood of the Lamb, and
the word of their testimony, and they loved
not their lives unto death,-a threefold
cord that could never, and can never, be broken or
successfully resisted.
This explains the special persecution
at this time of the reshaped Jewish nation. It
is the outburst of the rage of the freshly defeated
Satan. But the Jew is protected. The armies
that would swallow the Jew up are swallowed up by
the great earthquake that closes the tribulation time.
The length of this persecution is
put in two different ways, twelve hundred and sixty
days, and “time, times, and half a time.”
This latter phrase seems to be an old Oriental or
Hebrew way of saying a year, two years, and half a
year. The same length of time is expressed in
yet another way in the eleventh chapter, forty and
two months. The time is thus put in three different
ways, that we may know surely that it means just plain
three and a half years of our common time. It
is significant that the dragon makes war with “the
rest” of the woman’s seed. This can
only mean the Church, which of course was born in the
Jewish nation. This is the first run of events
in this view.
Then follows a description of the
awful leader of evil during the tribulation time.
It is significant that, as Satan is cast out of heaven
down to the earth, this leader appears among men.
He has great intelligence and power and is the very
embodiment of blasphemy. He is described as a
strange mixture of wild beasts, having the chief characteristic
strength of each, the cunning of the leopard, the feet
of the bear, and the mouth of the lion.
He is the personal representative
on earth among men of Satan. There is something
strangely uncanny in the suggestion that he is some
former leader, who died, and is now raised from the
dead. There seems to be nothing too daring for
Satan to attempt in his impious opposition to God.
This leader comes into great prominence and power.
All the world wonders after him. And they worship
Satan, who is recognized as giving his power to this
notorious leader.
He comes to be accepted as the world
ruler, and is commonly worshipped by the people.
And he not only persecutes God’s people, but
overcomes them. A limit of time is set to his
sway. It is the same as already noted for Jerusalem
being desecrated, for God’s two witnesses, and
for the persecution of the Jew, i.e., forty
and two months, three and a half years.
It is striking that in the midst of
the description of his terrible reign there comes
a word that sounds like an echo from those messages
to the Churches. “If any man hath an ear,
let him hear." Then the word goes on warning,
pleading, and encouraging. In the midst of these
blasphemous conditions every man must do as he personally
decides. He may yield to this evil and become
a captive of evil, bound hand and foot. He may
try to use the world’s weapons in fighting God’s
battle, but will find himself outmatched in their
use. He may rise to the true level, and steadfastly
cling to his faith, and endure, and by faith be victorious
in the end.
The description goes on to tell of
the blasphemous worship demanded of all. This
leader has an assistant or lieutenant to whom he deputizes
great power. He makes an image to his chief, and
demands all to worship at this shrine. He has
supernatural power, that is, devilishly supernatural.
He performs great miracles, even calling down fire
from heaven. He gives breath to the image and
makes it speak. And he punishes with death any
one who refuses this blasphemous worship to the leader
and his image. And every one is required to have
a mark on his hand or his forehead as indicating his
loyalty to the leader. Whoever refuses is unable
to buy or sell. It is the boycott principle carried
to the last extreme.
While God’s two witnesses are
doing miracles by divine power this lieutenant is
doing them by devilish power. So the fearful account
goes on. One can easily imagine the vast crowds
swayed by the idolatrous worship, and the intense
suffering and distress among those who insist on being
steadfast and true in their faith.
Now in the midst of all this terrible
scene John is suddenly and tremendously startled by
something else.
In the vision John is in heaven looking
down on these scenes on the earth. Now his attention
is attracted by a scene that suddenly takes place
before his eyes in heaven. It is a scene of wondrous
winsomeness and beauty. It stands out in sharpest
contrast with what is going on on the earth.
There’s a great company standing
around the Lord Jesus, before the throne. They
are singing a wonderful song to the accompaniment of
harps, which they have. The volume of music is
like the voice of many waters, or like great thunder.
There is a simple, fine description of the character
of these singers. They are pure, and they
are obedient. In their purity they are
as undefiled virgins, the highest possible statement
of purity. And they follow the Lamb unquestioningly
whithersoever He goeth with fullest obedience.
Who are these, and where have they
come from so suddenly, at this moment, into the presence
of the One on the throne? The description tells
just what has happened. When things are at their
devilish worst down on the earth the Lord Jesus has
caught up His own from the earth. And they have
become like Him in character, for now they see Him
face to face as He is.
This recalls the scene, essentially
the same, back in the first view, in chapter seven,
where the great multitudes are suddenly seen before
the throne with palm branches, songs, and white garments.
It is the same company as there. But there is
a difference in telling the numbers. There
they are too many to be counted. Here they are
said to be a hundred and forty-four thousand.
It is symbolical, a picture number, the number of
full corporate completeness as with the Spirit-baptized
Jews in chapter seven.
The believers caught up out of the
great tribulation have been joined by the trusting
hearts of all time who have been waiting in the Father’s
presence for this glad day. The number is now
complete of all from creation’s earliest dawn,
who by grace have followed fully, regardless of hindrance
or opposition. This great climax is thus seen
by John in sudden and sharp contrast with the climax
of hellish evil on the earth.
Then John is shown the steps by which
this climax is reached. Verses six to the close
of this chapter seem clearly to be a detail of what
has gone before, describing the steps by which this
climax is reached, and then reaching further to the
judgment upon the evil. During the iniquitous
scenes being enacted on earth an angel is seen flying
in mid-heavens calling to the people on earth, in
warning, to give their worship and reverence to God
only. The gracious wooing of God never ceases.
Another angel follows, calling out
that the great system of iniquity, in which they are
enmeshed, is doomed. A third gives solemn warning
that those who yield to the terrible pressure, and
engage in the blasphemous worship, will be surely
and terribly punished. Again there comes another
echo of the strain of pleading in the Church messages.
In the midst of just such conditions as prevail then,
the saints can be steady in keeping the commandments
of God and the faith of Jesus.
And down into the awful persecution
being waged comes an encouraging voice from heaven.
There is special blessing from God on all those who
remain true, even unto death. There will be sweetest
rest for them, and their faithful witnessing and suffering
shall be all noted and acknowledged and rewarded as
they come up into the Father’s presence.
And then follows the blessed harvest
of the righteous whose wonderful arrival in heaven
has already been told in the opening scene of this
chapter. And then follows the awful harvest of
evil down on the earth, the visitation of judgments
coming at the very end of the persecution.
So closes this long remarkable view
of the tribulation. It connects back with the
nation of Israel. Its beginning is connected practically
with the casting of Satan down to earth. It gives
a description of the leader and the nature of the
persecution, and a brief statement of the steps with
which it ends. And it states in three different
ways that the length of time involved is three and
a half years.
A Bitter Cup to Its Dregs.
The fifth view is, not
of the whole tribulation time as with these others,
but of only a part, the closing part. It speaks
of the visitation of judgments, the great climactic
battle, and the earthquake, with which the period
is brought to its end.
It connects at the point in the fourth
view where those who have been suffering in the
tribulation are seen standing before the throne singing
with harps. It is said that they are singing the
song of Moses, who had the experience of tribulation
and deliverance in Egypt, and the song of the Lamb,
who went through the worst tribulation experience in
His contest with Satan and sin on our behalf.
It connects also with the close of
the second view, where the temple is seen opened
and the ark of the covenant is seen. That covenant
is now to receive further fulfilment. God never
forgets His promises and agreements. Seven angels
have seven golden bowls full of the wrath of God.
In this way is told the visitation of judgments now
described as taking place at this time.
In the first view the picture is of
seals being broken or opened, which indicates
the execution of a document. The trumpets
of the next view indicate a commanding call to action;
the seven thunders, not written, a great storm.
These bowls or vials indicate the administration
of a dose of bitter-tasting medicine. The visitation
of judgments by God is commonly spoken of in Scripture
in this language.
Then follows the description of the
judgments upon men’s persons, and everything
concerning their life. Men’s bodies are
diseased, the water is unfit to drink, the food supply
cut short; they suffer with terrible heat, and then
darkness. But there is no penitence. The
Euphrates is said to be dried up, suggesting that
it is the great river at or near the world’s
centre of action. So, it is said, the way is prepared
for the kings that come from the east.
And the prophetic bit in Isaiah comes
to mind about men passing over the Euphrates at the
time of the great gathering of the Jews. As though
aroused by all this to bitterest opposition there is
increased demon activity, and through it a great gathering
of all nations, at a place named in Palestine, for
a great battle.
Then a terrible climax comes in the
earthquake, with which the first, second, and third
views closed. It is the worst earthquake ever
experienced. It centres in “the great
city,” Babylon, the capital of the whole system
of wickedness. With the storm is a terrible hail.
The description tallies with that in the close of
the first view, and with the vivid prophetic
bit in Isaiah i-22.
There’s no suggestion of how
much time all this takes. The judgments visited
on Egypt at the deliverance of Israel are described
at much greater length, running into ten items.
Yet all could have occurred within five weeks, allowing
for brief intervals. Whether these judgments
occur in succession, or all at once, or partly in both
ways, they could all come within a very short time.
This fifth view depicts the final scene. It gives
the visitation of judgments ending the tribulation
period, describes a great pitched battle, in which
all nations are involved, and ends with the earthquake.
This is the third of the three great woes.
The sixth view is of the great
system of wickedness in the world, through which the
tribulation comes, and which is judged at its close.
The description is full of details of great interest
and instructiveness, but we can only have time at
present for the essential thing being taught.
The Spirit takes John into a wilderness. To the
Spirit’s eye wherever wickedness has sway, whether
vulgar or polished, political or commercial, cunning
or brazen, it is a wilderness.
Here is shown a woman gorgeously clothed,
prodigally bedecked with jewels, and having a cup
in her hand, made of gold, but full of vile filth.
Upon her forehead appears a description: “Mystery
[or explanation of mystery], Babylon the great, the
mother of harlots and of the abominations of the earth.”
This woman is riding upon a strange beast; it is scarlet-colored,
with seven heads and ten horns, and full of blasphemous
names. This is the startlingly suggestive picture.
Who is this woman? And what is
this beast upon which she is seated? The whole
description taken together suggests that she is meant
to stand for the whole system of wickedness which
has had such sway in the world from earliest time
until the end. And the beast represents typically
the dominant governmental powers. The two have
always worked together. There has been a consistent
unity of spirit and of characteristic, and a persistent
devilishness marking the wickedness in the world throughout
the ages.
It has been as though there were an
unseen spirit power tirelessly at work behind
all the varied manifestations of evil. The dominant
characteristic always has been blasphemy of God.
It has controlled thrones and royal power, and has
had unlimited gold at its command. And it has
always been an enemy, subtle or open, cunning or violent,
of God and His people.
That system or genius of evil is represented
in the Old Testament as finding expression in one
great political power after another, but chiefly in
the power of Babylon. Babylon stands typically
in these older pages, not merely for the great empire
of the Euphrates, but for the unseen spirit of evil
lying behind that power, and making use of it to carry
through its own foul purposes.
But that unseen evil spirit power
has found more than one agency to dominate and use.
Babylon long since passed off the stage as a political
factor. But the power of evil has not ceased.
It is distressing to note another great organization
behind and through which the power of evil has worked.
What is the system that has, for the past sixteen
centuries, been supported by the various great civil
governments?
There is only one answer. It
is the organization known as “the Christian
Church.” And the term Church must be taken
here in its fullest, broadest meaning. Its great
main stem historically is the Roman Catholic Church.
The first great split-off was the Greek Orthodox Church.
The Church of England was a later break-off.
These, with the various government-ally supported
Churches, and those free of such support, and various
ancient primitive bodies,-these all together
make up the organization known as “the Church.”
The two symbolical characteristics
of this woman and the two dominant characteristics
of this historical Church are the same. The Church
has been and is supported almost wholly by the civil
governments, and used by them in furthering their
policies. And it has been active in persecuting
to death the people of God who would not yield to its
domination. It has been marked by intolerance
of all not yielding to its wishes, and especially
of the Jew. That intolerance has been carried
not only to the extreme of blood, but a riot of bloodshed.
This is utterly heart-breaking to realize and to repeat.
The woman is said to be “drunken
(1) with the blood of the saints, and (2) with the
blood of the martyrs of Jesus.” The twofold
statement is seen to cover the two great periods,
before Christ and since. And it covers also the
two great powers through which the spirit of evil has
chiefly worked in those two periods. But the name
given first in the plains of Shinar, and used characteristically
of the God-defying power of evil, is given here, Babylon.
It will be Babylon again at the very end after the
Church system is overthrown.
It is plainly said that the beast
represents the great civil or governmental power in
its final stage, the shape it will be in at the end
when these events occur. The chief dominating
political power of the world will have passed through
a succession of changes, seven kingdoms successively
following each other. At the end there will be
a combination of some sort, with ten great subdivisions,
and one great head over all.
But at the last, the civil power will
discard the Church, and persecute it. The spirit
of evil thus gets embodiment typically in the great
Babylon power, then in the Church, and at the very
last, in a coalition of civil powers heading up in
a new Babylon.
Then follows announcement of the fall
of Babylon. The city is regarded here as the
earthly capital of the organized system of unseen evil
spirit power at work in the world. The city and
the system are inseparably allied. The name Babylon
is used in the Bible for both system and city.
If the question be asked what city
is meant here, there can be but one answer. From
the twelfth of Genesis on the Bible never touches history,
except as history touches Israel as a nation.
A thoughtful review of the book makes this clear.
And this book of Revelation is a gathering-up of Bible
threads, and only these. There is only one city
in the Bible record that answers to the description
here, “the great city which reigneth over the
kings of the earth.” “Babylon the
great.”
But the old Babylon lies in ruins.
And its ruined condition has been quoted as the fulfilment
of the famous passage in Isaiah xii-22. It
should be carefully noted that the present conditions
at the site of old Babylon do not seem to satisfy
fully the language of that passage. It would
seem to be another illustration of the rare use of
language in the Bible, which adapts a passage accurately
to one event, and then to a second event, a long time
afterward.
This would, of course, involve the
rebuilding of the old capital of the Euphrates.
The reverent student quietly notes the movements taking
place in that part of the world, but restrains mere
curious speculation, as he continues fervently to
pray, “Thy kingdom come.”
This eighteenth chapter of Revelation
seems like an echo of that intense twenty-first of
Isaiah, and indeed of a strain sounding all through
the prophetic books. One familiar with the old
writings is not surprised to find this echo; he expects
it. No echo of God’s voice or purpose is
ever lost. God never loses any of the threads
out of His hand.
Hallelujah! He Comes.
The seventh view presents the
climax. It includes from chapter nineteen to
chapter twenty-two, verse five. It presents in
full the great scene that closes this tribulation
period; touches the kingdom in a bare word so as to
fit it into its place in the scheme of events being
outlined; and then gives the final wind-up after the
Kingdom time is over. We want to look now at
the portion connected immediately with what has just
gone before, the description of the wondrous close
of the tribulation, in chapters nineteen, verse one,
to twenty, verse three.
John hears a great outburst of worship
and praise in heaven. It resembles the outburst
back in chapter five, when the Lamb took the book.
But it is seen to be yet greater than that. Its
joy and delight seem wholly unbounded. Again
the living creatures and the four and twenty elders
lead the song that bursts out.
John tries to tell how great was the
volume of adoring song that fills all heaven.
It is like the voice of a great multitude, like the
waters that he had heard many a time breaking in deafening
roar on the rocky coast of Patmos, like the mighty
thunders which he had heard so much in these visions.
And the song they sang explains the
exuberance of their singing, “Hallelujah:
for the Lord our God, the Almighty reigneth.”
At last He reigneth. In the earlier parts
of the book God is spoken of as “He who is and
who was, and who cometh." As later events
are described that last part “who cometh”
is significantly dropped. Clearly at these points
being described He has come. Now the great realization
bursts out from countless voices, the Lord, our God,
the Almighty reigneth!
And John is bidden to write the words
whose refrain has filled such a place in hymns and
devout speech, “Blessed are they that are bidden
to the marriage supper of the Lamb.” And
the one who seems to be serving as John’s guide
puts peculiar emphasis on all that is being revealed
by saying, “these are true words of God.”
John is so overwhelmed that he falls
down to worship this one. And then he finds that
this is one of his own redeemed brothers of the earth.
And as He quietly bids John give his worship to One
only, He adds very significant words: “the
testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.”
The whole genius and soul of all this wealth of prophecy
is to point men to our Lord Jesus Christ, God to us.
And now comes the event toward which
the ages have looked. The heavens open. And
our Lord Jesus appears coming in glory to earth.
At last He comes. There’s a wonderful description.
He comes as a conqueror, riding forth to judge the
earth righteously, and to make war on evil. His
eyes are as a flame of fire, and upon His head many
diadems. He has a name indicating that He is
all alone in the experiences He has been through,
and in His character. He comes as King of kings
and Lord of lords, to rule all the earth with a new
absolutism, to right all wrongs, and visit the indignant
wrath of God upon all sin.
As He appears an angel gives warning
of what is coming. In words that are an echo
of Ezekiel’s, long centuries before, he calls
to all the scavenger birds of the earth that haunt
battlefields to come to a great feasting time.
And John sees the vast armies of the nations of the
earth all gathered together for a last mighty battle,
under the leadership of the great leader of lawlessness
and his lieutenant.
And the utter impotence of their struggle
against God is revealed in the quietness and brevity
with which their defeat and capture are told.
Satan’s great earth leader and his chief who
deceived the people with his miraculous power, both
are taken and forever put away. And then Satan
himself is chained and fastened securely in the abyss.
Such is the tremendous consummation quietly told in
a few lines. And then follows the setting up
of the glorious kingdom on earth.
Whatever the immediate circumstances
under which the Second Psalm was penned, it will be
readily seen how it fits into this situation at the
end.
“Why do the nations tumultuously assemble,
And the peoples meditate a vain thing?
The kings of the earth set themselves,
And the rulers take counsel together,
Against Jehovah and against His Anointed, saying,
’Let us break their bonds asunder,
And cast away their cords from us.’”
But their efforts seem so puny, and
the result so one-sided, that
“He that sitteth in the heavens will laugh:
The Lord will have them in derision.”
And we remember that, in these Revelation
pages, it is always with the sword of His mouth that
the Lord Jesus is said to fight, as we read on:
“Then will He speak unto them in
His wrath,
And vex [or trouble] them in His sore displeasure;
[saying]
’Yet I have set my King
Upon my holy hill of Zion.’”
Then the Son speaks:
“I will tell of the decree:
Jehovah said unto me, ’thou art my Son;
This day have I begotten thee.
Ask of me and I will give thee the nations for
thine inheritance,
And the uttermost parts of the earth for thy
possession.
Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron;
Thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter’s
vessel.’”
And the writer of the Psalms closed
with a word of earnest counsel to the kings of earth:
“Now therefore be wise, O ye kings:
Be instructed, ye judges of the earth.
Serve Jehovah with fear,
And rejoice with trembling [awe],
Kiss the Son, lest He be angry, and ye perish
in the way,
For His wrath will soon be kindled.
Blessed are all they that take refuge in Him.”
Thus it is seen that these seven views
describe (1) the general characteristics of the tribulation
time; (2) the way in which it comes, that is, by the
withdrawal of restraint and so the loosing of evil;
(3) the faithful witness being borne throughout the
period; (4) the great evil leader and the character
of the persecution he wages; (5) the visitation of
judgments upon earth with the great gathering of nations
to battle against God; (6) the world system of evil;
and (7) the coming of our Lord Jesus to judge evil
and set up the kingdom.
Still He Waits.
It will at once be noted that these
things group up, naturally and easily, under three
headings. First, there is a terrible persecution
of God’s people. This will end in a visitation
of judgments, including great plagues.
There will be a gathering of the armies of all nations,
and a great battle. It will end in a decisive
defeat for them by the personal coming of the Lord
Jesus, and will be accompanied by a terrific earthquake
and an equally terrific shake-up of the heavenly bodies
connected with the earth, sun, moon, and stars.
Then comes the establishment of the Kingdom of
God upon earth. These three things stand
dominantly out.
It comes as a surprise to one who
has not been thinking especially about it, to find
how these three things are the same three that stood
out so prominently at the close of the study of future
items in the old prophetic books. It is natural
that it should be so, of course, since the Book of
God is one in its essential unity.
But there is a great fascination in
finding the parts to come together so simply and naturally.
As we gather up the Old Testament pages these three
things sift out and group together as distinctly not
yet fulfilled, and so future. As we listen to
our Lord Jesus talking, again these same three items
are emphasized by Him. And now the same three
are found here.
Dr. A. F. Schauffler tells of a striking
experience he had in connection with his mission work
in New York City. A letter came to him from a
stranger in Germany. It said: “I know
you are a city missionary. I am sending a trunk
in your care. Inclosed in this letter you will
find a piece of paper cut. A man will come and
present to you a piece of paper matching this piece.
Please give him the trunk.” And enclosed
in the letter was a piece of paper cut in zigzags.
Letter and paper were laid away to
await developments. Some weeks later a stranger
came in and presented a queerly cut piece of paper,
saying: “I think you have a piece that
matches this.” Dr. Schauffler got out his
piece of paper, laid the two side by side, found that
they matched, and said to his visitor: “There’s
your trunk.”
Even so these prophetic pages of the
New Testament are found to fit exactly the pages of
the Old, written centuries before. It is not
surprising, however. One hand cut the paper into
two pieces in Germany, and naturally they fitted when
put together in New York. One Hand has guided
the men writing in both Old and New.
When Jeremiah was first called to
his work as God’s messenger he was shown in
vision the branch of an almond tree. The almond
tree is the earliest of all trees to wake from its
winter’s sleep at the first hint of spring warmth
coming. And so it was called the “watching”
or “watcher” tree. Then God said
to Jeremiah: “Even so, I eagerly watch
over my word to bring it to life and fruitage at the
very earliest opportunity." And so the word of
this watching God and its fulfilment match, regardless
of the thing we call time, even running into centuries.
And it is very helpful for those of
us who have had a sort of dread of prophecy as of
a vague something that we can’t understand, to
find after all how simple it is. Just three great
items stand out of these prophetic pages that are
waiting fulfilment.
Such is the seven-fold view, which
is taken up almost wholly with the clearing-up storm
in the King’s realm. But all this is still
future. We are still in that waiting time.
Our Lord Jesus still stands among the candlesticks.
Still He is waiting for His Church to be faithful.
He still waits for each of us who is a bit of His
Church. He is depending on us to be faithful,
by His grace, day by day, during this waiting time.
And while He waits all His limitless power is at
our disposal, as we follow His leading. We
may take as much as we need. But the taking must
be with the life.
A dear missionary friend told of a
simple experience that meant much to him. We
were walking together in the town in Korea where his
mission work is. His school was the centre of
the recent troublous times in Korea, and the storm
seemed to rage about his own person at its outburst.
As we talked all his native teachers and several of
his older students were in prison. The experience
he told me was of earlier days in this country, but
had come back to his memory as a great refreshment
during the troublous times.
He was a professor in a small college
in our Middle West. Special funds were being
raised, for extension. He was to ask a certain
man of wealth for a large donation. He planned
and prayed much, and at last went to see the man in
another city by appointment. He had a keen sense
of the responsibility of his task.
As he entered the building where the
man’s office was he was greeted cordially by
a young man whom he remembered as a former student,
to whom he had been friendly in some time of minor
need. But he had not connected him in his mind
with this wealthy man, whose son he was. Now
as the former student learned of his professor friend’s
errand, he said with all the confidence of a son on
good terms with his father:
“Come right in; father’s here.”
As they stepped into the man’s office the son
said, simply:
“Father, this is an old friend
of mine. He’s all right. Give him
whatever he wants.”
And the father, busy at his desk,
with barely a look at the appointed visitor, reached
one hand over for his checkbook, and simply said:
“How much do you want?”
My friend, taken completely by surprise
at the unexpected turn of events, managed to name
the large sum he had been thinking and praying over
so much. And before he could quite recover from
his surprise, he found himself outside walking up
the street with the coveted check in his pocket, praising
God for such an answer to his prayers. It had
been years before, but as we walked and talked it
all came back with a fresh flush of feeling.
The present is a waiting time.
It may seem to some as though they are in the wilderness.
Clear and distinct comes a quiet voice:
“What’ll you have?
Whatever you choose to ask, for My Son’s sake.”
May we reach out to take as much as
He is reaching down to give. But the taking must
be with the life.