Notes on the Apocalypse eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 371 pages of information about Notes on the Apocalypse.

Notes on the Apocalypse eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 371 pages of information about Notes on the Apocalypse.

13.  And the same hour was there a great earthquake, and the tenth part of the city fell, and in the earthquake were slain of men seven thousand:  and the remnant were affrighted, and gave glory to the God of heaven.

V. 13.—­“The same hour” that the witnesses mark by their resurrection,—­contemporaneously with that joyful event, is “a great earthquake,”—­a revolution, (ch. vi. 12.) “The tenth part of the city fell.”  The city,—­“Sodom.”  “Tenth part of the city,”—­a “street,” equivalent to “horn.”  Some one of the “ten kingdoms” will secede from the antichristian confederacy, or imperial dominion; “and the remnant,”—­the other nine, dreading the Mediator’s vengeance, will reluctantly but speedily submit. (See ch. vi. 16, 17.)—­In the “earthquake were slain of men (names, titles,) seven thousand.”  By “names of men” to be slain,—­that is, abolished in reorganized society, we are to understand those “names of blasphemy” mentioned, (ch. xiii. 1,) hereafter to be explained.

We have now taken a very cursory view of the contents of the “little open book.”  Its place is between the termination of the fourth, and the sounding of the seventh trumpet.  In other words, it gives an outline of the contest between the witnesses and Antichrist during 1260 years,—­events running parallel in time, at least in part, with the first two woe-trumpets; for it obviously anticipates also, the effects of the third and last woe.

This may be as suitable a place as any other, before proceeding to a consideration of the seventh trumpet, to direct attention to the method which Infinite Wisdom has chosen, by which to reveal to mankind the purposes of God in prophecy.  He who alone “knows the end from the beginning,”—­who “from ancient times has declared the things that are not yet done,” has told us plainly,—­“I have multiplied visions, and used similitudes, by the ministry (hand,) of the prophets.” (Hosea xii. 10.) Now since God has multiplied visions, we ought not to think it strange if the same important events in providence be predicted by several, or by many of the prophets; or that one and the same important event be foretold “at sundry times and in diverse manners” by the same prophet.  How often, and by how many prophets was the dispersion of the Jews foretold!—­the downfall of ancient cities, Babylon, Nineveh, Tyre!—­Need we refer to the language of our Lord, addressed to his disciples on the way to Emmaus?—­“And beginning at Moses, and all the prophets, he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself.” (Luke xxiv. 27.) We may be sure that the things concerning Christ and the interests of his kingdom in this world, are the theme of inspired prophets in the New Testament as well as in the old.  Agreeably to these views, we find Nebuchadnezzar’s dream and Daniel’s visions relate to the same objects and events.  What was more obscurely revealed in the monarch’s dream, is rendered more intelligible

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Notes on the Apocalypse from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.