“I John, your brother, and partner
in the affliction, and kingdom and patience of
Jesus Christ, was in the island called Patmos, for
the word of God, and for the testimony of Jesus
Christ. I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s
day, and heard behind me a great voice, like that
of a trumpet, saying, What thou seest, write in a book,
and send it to the seven congregations, to Ephesus,
and to Smyrna, and to Pergamos, and to Thyatira,
and to Sardis, and to Philadelphia, and to Laodicea.” Rev
1:9-11.
This gives a clue to the date of the
Apocalypse. It was written when John was in the
Isle of Patmos: “It is the general testimony
of ancient authors, that St. John was banished into
Patmos in the time of Domitian, in the latter part
of his reign, and restored by his successor, Nerva.
But the book could not be published till after John’s
release, and return to Ephesus, in Asia. Domitian
died in 96, and his persecution did not commence till
near the close of his reign.” DR.
CLARKE.
“DOMITIAN, having exercised
his cruelty against many, and unjustly slain no small
number of noble and illustrious men at Rome, ... at
length established himself as the successor of NERO,
in his hatred and hostility to GOD. He was the
second that raised a persecution against us.
In this persecution, it is handed down by tradition,
that the apostle and evangelist, JOHN, ... was condemned
to dwell on the island of Patmos. IRENAEUS, indeed,
in his fifth book against the heresies, where
he speaks of the calculation formed on the epithet
of Antichrist, in the above-mentioned Revelation of
JOHN, speaks in the following manner respecting him:
’If, however, it were necessary to proclaim his
name (i.e. Antichrist’s), openly at the
present time, it would have been declared by him who
saw the Revelation, for it was not long since it was
seen, but almost in our own times, at the close
of DOMITIAN’s reign.’ “ EUSEBIUS.
Prof. Stuart, who dissents from
the opinion, admits that “a majority of the
older critics have been inclined to adopt the opinion
of Irenaeus, viz.: that it was written during
the reign of Domitian, i.e., during the last part of the first century,
or in A. D 95 or 96.
John’s adherence to the word
and testimony of Christ, had caused his banishment as
others “were slain for the word of
God, and for the testimony which they held,”
(6:9); and whose living again and reigning with Christ,
was subsequently shown John in a vision, 20:4.
John was in the spirit; i.e.,
he was in a state of prophetic ecstasy, in which he
was, as it were, caught away from a realization of
the actual and the present, and shown “the things
which must be hereafter.” It was on the
“Lord’s day,” the first day of the
week, which was so called because on that day the
Lord arose from the dead. It was a day which has
been observed by all Christians in especial remembrance
of that event. John does not appear to have anticipated
any such announcement, until he was suddenly startled
from his meditation by a voice in trumpet tones, announcing
itself by the titles of Christ, and commanding him
to write to the churches what he saw.
Hearing the voice, he turned to see who had spoken
to him, and beheld a