Verse 1-2
Revelation 6:1-2. And — Being
all attention to this wonderful
scene; I saw when the Lamb
opened one of the seals — Of the
book which he had taken from the
hand of him that sat on the
throne; and I heard, as it were
the noise of thunder —
Signifying the great importance
of the event about to be
disclosed; one of the four
living creatures — That is, it
seems, the first, which was like
a lion, looking forward toward
the east, toward Asia and Syria,
where the prophecy had its
principal accomplishment, and
from whence Christ and his
gospel came. Saying, Come and
see — Pay particular attention
to what is now to be exhibited.
And I saw, and behold a white
horse — The contents of this
seal seem evidently to refer to
the triumph of Christianity over
Jewish and heathen opposition,
by the labours of its first
preachers. Therefore the person
here represented is Jesus
Christ, who had received a
kingdom from the Father, which
was to rule all nations, and
concerning which it was
foretold, that notwithstanding
the efforts that would be made
by earth and hell to oppose its
progress, and even to destroy
it, it should be preserved and
prevail, so that at length all
enemies to it should be subdued,
and the kingdoms of this world
should become the kingdom of our
God and of his Christ. The white
colour of the horse, the bow
which he had that sat on it,
shooting arrows afar off, the
crown given unto him, and his
going forth conquering and to
conquer — All these
circumstances betoken victory,
triumph, prosperity, enlargement
of empire, and dominion over
many people. And all these
figurative representations of
authority, government, success,
and conquest, may be properly
applied to the gospel and the
kingdom of Christ, which was now
beginning to spread far and
wide, and would tend greatly to
comfort the faithful in Christ
Jesus, assuring them that,
however the Jews on the one
hand, or the heathen Roman
empire on the other, opposed and
persecuted them, yet they should
see the punishment of their
enemies, both Jews and heathen,
and the cause of Christianity
prevailing over both, in the
proper and appointed time. These
expressions, and this
interpretation of them, are
elucidated by the words of the
psalmist, Psalms 45:3, &c: Gird
thy sword upon thy thigh, O most
mighty, and in thy majesty ride
prosperously, because of truth,
&c. Thine arrows are sharp, &c.,
whereby the people fall under
thee. Thy throne, O God, is for
ever, &c. The application of
this prophecy to Christ is still
further justified by Revelation
19:11, I saw heaven opened, and
behold a white horse. &c., a
passage which all allow was
intended of Christ; he only
being worthy of being called, as
he is there, Faithful and True,
and THE WORD OF GOD. Thus, with
great propriety to the order and
design of this revelation, the
dignity and power of Christ, and
the protection and success of
his gospel, are the first part
of its prophecy for the
consolation of his followers,
which, it seems, is the chief
end of the whole book.
Verse 3-4
Revelation 6:3-4. When he opened
the second seal, I heard the
second living creature — Which
was like an ox, and had his
station toward the west; say,
Come and see — As the former had
done when the first seal was
opened; and there went out
another horse that was red —
Seeming to betoken great
slaughter and desolation by
approaching wars: and to him
that sat thereon was given to
take peace from the earth — In
the year 75, Vespasian had
dedicated a temple to Peace: but
after a time we hear no more of
peace; all is full of war and
bloodshed. According to Bishop
Newton, this second period
commences with Trajan, who came
from the west, being a Spaniard
by birth, and was the first
foreigner who was elevated to
the imperial throne. In his
reign, and that of his
successor, Adrian, there were
horrid wars and slaughters, and
especially between the
rebellious Jews and Romans. Dion
relates, that the Jews about
Cyrene slew of the Romans and
Greeks two hundred and twenty
thousand men, with the most
shocking circumstances of
barbarity. In Egypt also, and in
Cyprus, they committed the like
barbarities, and there perished
two hundred and forty thousand
men more. But the Jews were
subdued in their turn by the
other generals and Lucius, sent
against them by Trajan.
Eusebius, writing of the same
time, says, that the Jews,
inflamed, as it were, by some
violent and seditious spirit, in
the first conflict gained a
victory over the Gentiles, who,
flying to Alexandria, took and
killed the Jews in the city. The
emperor sent Marius Turbo
against them, with great forces
by sea and land, who, in many
battles, slew many myriads of
the Jews. The emperor also,
suspecting that they might make
the like commotions in
Mesopotamia, ordered Lucius
Quietus to expel them out of the
province, who, marching against
them, slew a very great
multitude of them there.
Orosius, treating of the same
time, says, that the Jews, with
an incredible commotion, made
wild, as it were, with rage,
rose at once in different parts
of the earth. For throughout all
Libya they waged the fiercest
wars against the inhabitants,
and the country was almost
desolated. Egypt also, Cyrene,
and Thebais they disturbed with
cruel seditions. But in
Alexandria they were overcome in
battle. In Mesopotamia also war
was made upon the rebellious
Jews by the command of the
emperor. So that many thousands
of them were destroyed with vast
slaughter. They utterly
destroyed Salamis, a city of
Cyprus, having first murdered
all the inhabitants. These
things were transacted in the
reign of Trajan; and in the
reign of Adrian was their great
rebellion, under their false
Messiah Barchochab, and their
final dispersion, after fifty of
their strongest castles, and
nine hundred and eighty-five of
their best towns had been
demolished, and after five
hundred and eighty thousand men
had been slain by the sword,
besides an infinite number who
had perished by famine and
sickness, and other casualties;
with great loss and slaughter
too of the Romans, insomuch that
the emperor forbore the usual
salutations in his letters to
the senate. Here was another
illustrious triumph of Christ
over his enemies; and the Jews
and the Romans, both the
persecutors of the Christians,
were remarkably made the
dreadful executioners of divine
vengeance upon one another. The
great sword and red horse are
expressive emblems of this
slaughtering and bloody period,
and the proclamation for
slaughter is fitly made by a
creature like an ox, that is
destined for slaughter. This
period continued during the
reigns of Trajan and his
successors, by blood or
adoption, about ninety-five
years.
Verse 5-6
Revelation 6:5-6. And when he
had opened the third seal I
heard the third living creature
— Which was like a man, and had
his station in the south; say —
As the two former had done; Come
and see. And I beheld, and lo a
black horse — A fit emblem of
mourning and distress;
particularly a black famine, as
the ancient poets termed it. And
he that sat on him had a pair of
balances, or scales, in his hand
— Implying that men should eat
their bread by weight, and drink
their water by measure, or that
there should be a great
scarcity. For when there is
great plenty men do not think it
worth their while to weigh and
measure what they eat and drink;
but when there is a famine or
scarcity they are obliged to do
it. And I heard a voice — It
seems from God himself; in the
midst of the four living
creatures, saying, A measure of
wheat for a penny, &c. — As if
he had said to the horseman,
Hitherto shalt thou come, and no
farther. Let there be a measure
of wheat for a penny — This may
seem, to an English reader, a
description of great plenty, but
it certainly intends the
contrary. The word χοινιξ,
chœnix, a Grecian measure, was
only about equal to our quart,
and was no more than was allowed
to a slave for his daily food.
And the Roman penny, the
denarius, about 7½d. English,
was the usual daily wages of a
labourer: so that, if a man’s
daily labour could earn no more
than his daily bread, without
other provision for himself and
family, corn must needs bear a
very high price. This must have
been fulfilled when the Grecian
measure and the Roman money were
still in use, as also when that
measure was the common measure,
and this money the current coin.
It was so in Egypt under Trajan.
And three measures of barley for
a penny — Either barley was, in
common, far cheaper among the
ancients than wheat, or the
prophecy mentions this as
something peculiar. And see thou
hurt not the oil and the wine —
Let there not be a scarcity of
every thing. Let there be some
provision left to supply the
want of the rest. Lowman
interprets this third seal of
the scarcity in the time of the
Antonines, from A.D. 138 to A.D.
193, and produces passages from
Tertullian and the Roman
historians, concerning the
calamity the empire endured by
scarcity in this period. But
Bishop Newton supposes this
third period commences with
Septimius Severus, who was an
emperor from the south, being a
native of Africa; and was an
enacter of just and equal laws,
and very severe and implacable
to offences; he would not suffer
even petty larcenies to go
unpunished; as neither would
Alexander Severus in the same
period, who was a most severe
judge against thieves; and was
so fond of the Christian maxim,
Whatsoever you would not have
done to you, do not you to
another, that he commanded it to
be engraven on the palace, and
on the public buildings. These
two emperors were also no less
celebrated for the procuring of
corn and oil, and other
provisions; and for supplying
the Romans with them, after they
had experienced the want of
them: thus repairing the
neglects of former times, and
correcting the abuses of former
princes. The colour of the black
horse befits the severity of
their nature and their name, and
the balances are the well-known
emblem of justice, as well as an
intimation of scarcity. And the
proclamation for justice and
judgment, and for the
procuration of corn, oil, and
wine, is fitly made by a
creature like a man. This period
continued during the reigns of
the Septimian family, about
forty-two years.
Verse 7-8
Revelation 6:7-8. And when he
had opened the fourth seal, I
heard the voice of the fourth
living creature — Like an eagle,
toward the north; say, Come and
see — Receive a further
discovery of the divine will.
And I looked, and behold a pale
horse — Suitable to pale death,
his rider. By death, in the
Hebrew, we are frequently to
understand the pestilence. See
Jeremiah 9:21; Jeremiah 18:21;
and Sirach 39:29. And many other
instances might be produced. And
hell — Or hades, rather,
representing the state of
separate souls, followed with
him. And power was given unto
them — Namely, to death and
hades. Or if we read, with
Bengelius, αυτω, the expression
is, Power was given to him,
namely, to death; over the
fourth part of the earth — That
is, a very considerable part of
the heathen Roman empire: to
kill — By the several judgments
of God here mentioned; with
sword — That is, with war; with
hunger — Or famine; with death —
Or the pestilence; and with the
beasts of the earth — These are
called the four sore judgments
of God, in the style of ancient
prophecy. See Ezekiel 14:21;
Ezekiel 33:27. The meaning is,
That the sword and famine, which
were judgments of the foregoing
seals, are continued in this,
and the pestilence is added to
them. Accordingly, says Lowman,
we find all these judgments in a
very remarkable manner in this
part of history, that is, in the
reigns of Maximin, Decius,
Gallus, Volusian, and Valerian,
beginning after Severus, about
the year 211, to A.D. 270. Thus
also Bishop Newton; who
observes, This period commences
with Maximin, who was an emperor
from the north, being born of
barbarous parents in a village
of Thrace. He was indeed a
barbarian in all respects; an
historian affirming that there
was not a more cruel animal upon
the earth. The history of his,
and several succeeding reigns,
is full of wars and murders,
mutinies of soldiers, invasions
of foreign armies, rebellions of
subjects, and deaths of princes.
There were more than twenty
emperors in the space of fifty
years, and all, or most of them,
died in war, or were murdered by
their own soldiers and subjects.
Besides lawful emperors, there
were, in the reign of Gallienus,
thirty usurpers, who set up in
different parts of the empire,
and came all to violent and
miserable ends. Here was
sufficient employment for the
sword; and such wars and
devastations must necessarily
produce a famine, and the famine
is another distinguishing
calamity of this period. In the
reign of Gallus, the Scythians
made such incursions, that not
one nation, subject to the
Romans, was left unwasted by
them; and every unwalled town,
and most of the walled cities,
were taken by them. In the reign
of Probus also there was a great
famine throughout the world; and
for want of victuals, the army
mutinied and slew him. A usual
consequence of famine is the
pestilence, which is the third
distinguishing calamity of this
period. According to Zonaras, it
arose from Ethiopia, while
Gallus and Volusian were
emperors, pervaded all the Roman
provinces, and for fifteen years
together incredibly exhausted
them; and the learned Lipsius
declares, that he never read of
any greater plague, for the
space of time that it lasted, or
of land that it overspread.
Zozimus also, speaking of the
devastations of the Scythians
before mentioned, further adds,
that the pestilence, not less
pernicious than war, destroyed
whatever was left of human kind,
and made such havoc as it had
never done in former times. Many
other historians, and other
authors quoted by Bishop Newton,
bear the same testimony; among
whom Eutropius affirms, that the
reign of Gallus and Volusian was
remarkable only for the
pestilence and diseases. And
Trebellius Pollio attests, that
in the reign of Gallienus the
pestilence was so great, that
five thousand men died in one
day. Now when countries thus lie
uncultivated, uninhabited, and
unfrequented, the wild beasts
usually multiply, and come into
the towns to devour men, which
is the fourth distinguishing
calamity of this period. This
would appear a probable
consequence of the former
calamities, if history had
recorded nothing. But Julius
Capitolinus, in his account of
the younger Maximin, p. 150,
informs us that five hundred
wolves together entered into a
city, which was deserted by its
inhabitants, where this Maximin
chanced to be. The colour of the
pale horse, therefore, is very
suitable to the mortality of
this period; and the
proclamation for death and
destruction is fitly made by a
creature like an eagle, that
watches for carcasses. This
period the bishop considers as
continuing from Maximin to
Dioclesian, about fifty years.
Verse 9-10
Revelation 6:9-10. The following
seals have nothing extrinsical,
like the proclamation of the
living creatures, but they are
sufficiently distinguished by
their internal marks and
characters. When he opened the
fifth seal, I saw under, or at
the foot of, the altar — Which
was presented to my view; not
the golden altar of incense,
mentioned Revelation 9:13, but
the altar of burnt-offering,
spoken of also Revelation 8:5;
Revelation 14:18; Revelation
16:7; the souls of them that
were slain — Namely, newly slain
as sacrifices, and offered to
God; for the word of God — For
believing and professing faith
in it; and for the testimony —
To the truth of the gospel;
which they held — That is,
courageously retained in the
midst of all opposition. A
proper description this of true
Christians, who persevered in
the faith and practice of the
gospel, notwithstanding all the
difficulties and sufferings of
persecution. And they cried with
a loud voice — As making an
appeal to the injured justice of
God. This cry did not begin now,
but under the first Roman
persecution. The Romans
themselves had already avenged
the martyrs slain by the Jews on
the whole nation; saying, How
long — They knew their blood
would be avenged, but not
immediately, as is now shown
them; O Lord — The word ο
δεσποτης properly signifies the
master of a family; it is
therefore beautifully used by
these, who were peculiarly of
the household of God. Holy and
true — Both the holiness and
truth of God require him to
execute judgment and vengeance;
dost thou not judge and avenge
our blood on them — Who, without
remorse, have poured it out as
water. This desire of theirs is
pure, and suitable to the will
of God. These martyrs are
concerned for the praise of
their Master, of his holiness
and truth. And the praise is
given him, Revelation 19:2,
where the prayer of the martyrs
is changed into a thanksgiving.
But this sentence, How long,
&c., is intended, not so much to
express the desire of the
martyrs that their cause should
be vindicated, and their
persecutors punished, as to
signify that the cruelties
exercised upon them were of so
barbarous and atrocious a nature
as to deserve and provoke the
vengeance of God.
Verse 11
Revelation 6:11. And white robes
were given unto every one of
them — As a token of their
justification, and favourable
acceptance with God; of their
victory and triumph over death,
their joy and glory. And it was
said unto them, that they should
rest — That is, wait; yet for a
little season — Though, in the
mean time, their blood remained
unrevenged; until their
fellow-servants also, and their
brethren, that should be killed
for the defence of the gospel,
as they had been, should be
fulfilled — That is, should have
finished their testimony; or
till the number of the martyrs
should be completed, according
to the intention of Divine
Providence, in letting
persecutors go on a while, until
they should have filled up the
measure of their iniquities,
when the martyrs should receive
their full reward, as we shall
see hereafter. Lowman observes
here, very well, that “this
representation seems much to
favour the immediate happiness
of departed saints, and hardly
to consist with that
uncomfortable opinion, the
insensible state of departed
souls, till after the
resurrection.” There were other
persecutions before, but this
was by far the most
considerable, the tenth and last
general persecution, which was
begun by Dioclesian, and
continued by others, and lasted
longer, and extended farther,
and was sharper and more bloody,
than any or all preceding; and
therefore this was particularly
predicted. Eusebius and
Lactantius, who were two eye-
witnesses, have written large
accounts of it. Orosius asserts
that this persecution was longer
and more cruel than all the
past; for it raged incessantly
for ten years, by burning the
churches, proscribing the
innocent, and slaying the
martyrs. Sulpicius Severus, too,
describes it as the most bitter
persecution, which for ten years
together depopulated the people
of God; at which time all the
world almost was stained with
the sacred blood of the martyrs,
and was never more exhausted by
any wars. So that this became a
memorable era to the Christians,
under the name of the era of
Dioclesian, or, as it is
otherwise called, the era of
martyrs.
Verses 12-17
Revelation 6:12-17. And I beheld
— Further in my vision; when he
— The Lamb; had opened the sixth
seal; and lo! there was a great
earthquake — Greek, σεισμος
μεγας εγενετο, there was a great
concussion: for the expression
comprehends the shaking of
heaven as well as of the earth;
and the sun became black as
sackcloth of hair — It lost its
usual lustre, and looked black
and dark, as in a total eclipse;
and the moon became as blood —
Instead of appearing with its
usual brightness in the heavens,
it appeared of a dusky-red
colour, as blood. And the stars
of heaven fell — They seemed to
disappear out of their places in
the heavens, and to fall down
upon the earth, like meteors, or
as blasted fruit is blown down
from the trees upon the ground
in a violent storm. And the
heaven departed as a scroll, &c.
— It was further represented to
me in my vision as if the
heavens were no longer spread
over the earth, but rolled up
together as a roll of parchment;
and every mountain and every
island — The most secure from
the danger of earthquakes, were
not only shaken, but quite
overturned and destroyed; so as
never to be restored again: and
all this, says Lowman, “to
signify, according to the
expressions of ancient prophecy,
such a downfall of the empire
and power of heathen Rome, as
should never be recovered; but
the power of these idolatrous
enemies of the Christian faith
should cease and be no more, as
the power of the Assyrians and
Babylonians, the ancient enemies
of God’s people, was destroyed
and never recovered.” Thus the
Prophet Joel describing, in the
beautiful images of prophetic
style, a famine to be occasioned
by a great number of locusts,
which were to devour the whole
fruits of the earth, so
expresses it, Joel 2:10; The
earth shall quake before them,
the heavens shall tremble, the
sun and moon shall be dark, and
the stars shall withdraw their
shining. The Prophet Isaiah,
prophesying of a great
destruction of God’s enemies,
for their opposition to his
church, (which he calls the day
of the Lord’s vengeance, and the
year of recompenses for the
controversy of Zion, Isaiah
34:8,) thus describes it,
Revelation 6:4; And all the host
of heaven shall be dissolved,
and the heavens shall be rolled
together as a scroll, and all
their hosts shall fall down as
the leaf falleth off from the
vine, and as a falling fig from
the fig-tree. The general
meaning of which expressions is
explained in the following
verse; For my sword shall be
bathed in heaven; behold it
shall come down upon Idumea, and
upon the people of my curse to
judgment. In like manner, the
same prophet thus expresses the
judgments of God in the
punishment of sinners, Isaiah
13:10; For the stars of heaven
and the constellations thereof
shall not give their light; the
sun shall be darkened in his
going forth, and the moon shall
not cause her light to shine.
The meaning of which is thus
explained in the next words,
Revelation 6:11; I will punish
the world for their evil, and
the wicked for their iniquity;
and I will cause the arrogancy
of the proud to cease, and will
lay low the haughtiness of the
terrible. The Prophet Ezekiel
uses the same images to express
the downfall of oppressive
empires and power. Thus in the
prophecy of the destruction of
the empire of Egypt by the
empire of Babylon, Ezekiel
32:7-8; And when I shall put
thee out, I will cover the
heaven, and make the stars
thereof dark; I will cover the
sun with a cloud, and the moon
shall not give her light; all
the bright lights of heaven will
I make dark over thee, and set
darkness upon thy land, saith
the Lord God. And Jeremiah,
concerning the land of Judah,
Jeremiah 4:23-24; I beheld the
earth, and, lo! it was without
form and void; and the heavens,
and they had no light; I beheld
the mountains, and, lo, they
trembled; and all the hills
moved lightly. And thus our
Saviour himself also speaks,
concerning the destruction of
Jerusalem, Matthew 24:29; The
sun shall be darkened, and the
moon shall not give her light,
and the stars shall fall from
heaven, and the powers of the
heavens shall be shaken. Now it
is certain, says Bishop Newton,
who interprets this prophecy in
the same manner, that the fall
of any of those cities and
kingdoms was not of greater
concern and consequence to the
world, nor more deserving to be
described in such pompous
figures, than the fall of the
pagan Roman empire, when the
great lights of the heathen
world, the sun, moon, and stars,
the powers civil and
ecclesiastical, were all
eclipsed and obscured, the
heathen emperors and Cesars were
slain, the heathen priests and
augurs were extirpated, the
heathen officers and magistrates
were removed, the temples
demolished, and their revenues
appropriated to better uses. It
is customary with the prophets,
after they have described a
thing in the most symbolical and
figurative diction, to represent
the same again in plainer
language; and the same method is
observed here, Revelation
6:15-17 :
And the kings of the earth, and
the great men, and the rich men,
and the chief captains, and the
mighty men, and every bond-man
and every free- man; — That is,
Maximian, Galerius, Maximin,
Maxentius, Licinius, &c., with
all their adherents and
followers, were so routed and
dispersed, that they hid
themselves in the dens, and in
the rocks of the mountains, and
said to the mountains and rocks,
Fall on us and hide us —
Expressions used, as in other
prophets, (Isaiah 2:19; Isaiah
2:21; Hosea 10:8; Luke 23:30,)
to denote the utmost terror and
consternation; Fall on us, and
hide us from the face of him
that sitteth on the throne, and
from the wrath of the Lamb, &c.
— This is therefore a triumph of
Christ over his heathen enemies,
and a triumph after a severe
persecution; so that the time
and all the circumstances, as
well as the series and order of
the prophecy, agree perfectly
with this interpretation.
Galerius, Maximin, and Licinius
made even a public confession of
their guilt, recalled their
decrees and edicts against the
Christians, and acknowledged the
just judgments of God and of
Christ in their destruction. The
history of this extraordinary
event is given more at large by
Lowman, from whose account the
following short extract is
taken. A short time after the
heavy persecution of Dioclesian,
termed, in the prophecy, a
little season, (Revelation
6:11,) a very great change took
place in the heathen Roman
empire, attended with great
calamities on the persecutors of
the Christians, even such as
broke in pieces their oppressive
power. Dioclesian and Maximian
had been compelled by Galerius
to resign the empire and retire
to private life; but upon the
death of Constantius, and the
accession of his son Constantine
to his part of the empire,
Maxentius having got himself
declared emperor at Rome,
Galerius, to suppress this
rebellion, persuaded Maximian to
resume the empire, which he did;
but in a short time had the
mortification of being deposed;
and soon after, having in vain
attempted to take the life of
Constantine, put an end to his
own life. Galerius was smitten
with a very loathsome and
incurable distemper, attended
with such insupportable
torments, that he often
endeavoured to kill himself, and
caused some of his physicians to
be put to death because their
medicines had not been effectual
to remove his disorder. At last,
his wicked and cruel conduct
toward the Christians being
brought to his remembrance, as
the cause of his sufferings, he
immediately put an end to the
persecution (that had been
carried on against them) by a
public edict, in which he
particularly desired their
prayers for his recovery. Soon
after this public
acknowledgment, however, in
favour of Christianity, he died
of his loathsome distemper.
Constantine, who had become a
great favourer of the
Christians, marched against
Maxentius, who opposed him with
an army of one hundred and
seventy thousand foot, and
eighteen thousand horse; after a
very fierce and bloody battle,
Maxentius was defeated by
Constantine, who, having upon
this victory secured to himself
the whole empire of the west,
gave free liberty to Christians
openly to profess their
religion. But in the east,
Maximian revoked the liberties
which had been granted to the
Christians, and made war against
Licinius; being defeated,
however, with great slaughter of
his numerous army, he put many
heathen priests and soothsayers
to death as cheats. But not long
after, when he was endeavouring
to try the event of a second
battle, he was seized with a
violent distemper, attended with
intolerable pains and torments
all over his body; so that,
after being wasted to a
skeleton, and becoming quite
blind, he at length died in rage
and despair; confessing, upon
his death-bed, that his torments
were a just punishment upon him
for his malicious and unprovoked
proceedings against Christ and
his religion.
Constantine and Licinius now
remained sole emperors, the
former in the west, and the
latter in the east. Licinius
having cruelly persecuted the
Christians in his part of the
empire, a war broke out between
him and Constantine, in which
Licinius was overcome, and
forced to flee; and after
renewing the war, and carrying
it on with greater fury than
before, he was again defeated in
a general battle, in which it is
said one hundred thousand men
were slain. He also was taken
prisoner, and though his life
was then spared, yet upon new
attempts against the life of
Constantine, he was put to
death, and with him ended all
the heathen power of Rome. Thus,
by great and frequent
calamities, in which so many
emperors had their share one
after another, this wonderful
change was wrought in the
heathen Roman empire. So that
their power to oppress and
persecute the Christians fell,
never to rise again; and,
together with it, fell the pagan
superstition and idolatry. “This
part of history,” as Lowman
observes, “is very proper to the
general design of this whole
revelation; to support the
patience, and encourage the
perseverance of the church, by
such an instance of God’s power
and faithfulness in the
protection of the religion of
Christ, and punishment of its
enemies. We see in this period,
during the persecution of
heathen Rome, the church in a
state of great trial and
suffering, and yet preserved and
protected, and finally obtaining
a state of peace and safety,
when all the power of its
persecutors was totally
destroyed by God’s overruling
providence. Thus this history
confirms the general truth of
all the prophecies: and the
particular predictions of each
of them severally: — a strong
encouragement to the patience
and constancy of the true
church.” |