Verses 1-4
Revelation 14:1-4. I looked, and
behold a Lamb — The Lord Jesus,
in the form of a lamb, or as the
Lamb of God, which taketh away
the sins of the world, and not
only with horns like a lamb;
stood on mount Sion — Namely,
the heavenly Sion; and with him
a hundred forty and four
thousand — The same select
number that was mentioned
Revelation 7:4, the genuine
followers of the twelve
apostles, apostolically
multiplied, and therefore the
number of the church, as six
hundred and sixty-six is the
number of the beast; and as the
followers of the beast have the
name of the beast, so these have
the name of God, and, as some
copies add, of Christ, written
in their foreheads — As being
the redeemed of God and of the
Lamb, his now unalienable
property, and as having been,
when on earth, his professed
servants, and the same as the
witnesses. This prophecy often
introduces the inhabitants of
heaven as a kind of chorus, with
great propriety and elegance.
The church above, making
suitable reflections on the
grand events which are foretold
in this book, greatly serves to
raise the attention of real
Christians, and to teach the
high concern they have in them.
Thus is the church on earth
instructed, animated, and
encouraged, by the sentiments,
temper, and devotion of the
church in heaven. And I heard a
voice — Or sound, from heaven —
Sounding clearer and clearer;
first at a distance; as the
sound of many waters — Or
thunders; and afterward, being
nearer, it was as of harpers
harping on their harps — It
sounded vocally and
instrumentally at once. And they
sung — With voices and
instruments of music; as it were
a new song — The Christian song,
which they sung before, chap.
5.; and no man could learn that
song but the hundred and
forty-four thousand — Those who
had been the true spiritual
worshippers of the one true God,
through the one true Mediator,
Jesus Christ; all the rest of
mankind offering up their
devotions to other objects, and
through other mediators; or not
worshipping with a truly
spiritual worship; which were
redeemed from the earth — From
this present evil world, being
bought by the blood of Christ,
and delivered from the guilt and
power of sin by the word and
Spirit of God. These are they
which were not — Or, had not
been, defiled with women — It
seems that one kind of
defilement, and the most
alluring temptation, is put for
every other. Or rather, the
meaning is, that they had kept
themselves pure from the stains
and pollutions of spiritual
whoredom, or idolatry, with
which the other parts of the
world were miserably debauched
and corrupted. These are they
which follow the Lamb
whithersoever he goeth — Who are
nearest to him; or rather, the
meaning is, who followed the
Lamb in all things while on
earth; who adhered constantly to
the religion of Christ, in all
conditions and in all places,
whether in adversity or
prosperity; whether in
conventicles and deserts, or in
churches and cities. These were
redeemed from among men —
Rescued from the corruptions
prevalent among mankind, and
consecrated as the first-fruits
unto God and the Lamb — An
earnest and assurance of a more
plentiful harvest in succeeding
times. And in their mouth was
found no guile — They were as
free from hypocrisy as from
idolatry; for they were without
fault before the throne of God —
They resembled their blessed
Redeemer, who did no sin,
neither was guile found in his
mouth, (1 Peter 2:22,) and were,
as the apostle requires
Christians to be, blameless and
harmless, the sons of God
without rebuke, &c., Philippians
2:15. But possibly it may be
asked, Where did such a church
ever exist, especially before
the Reformation? To which it may
be replied, That it hath
existed, and not only in idea,
history demonstrates; as it hath
been before evinced that there
hath been, in every age, some
true worshippers of God, and
faithful servants of Jesus
Christ; and as Elijah did not
know the seven thousand who had
never bowed the knee to Baal, so
there may have been more true
Christians than were always
visible.
Verse 6-7
Revelation 14:6-7. And — As a
further motive to Christian
patience and constancy, this
vision of the happy state of
faithful Christians was followed
by another; I saw another angel
— A second is mentioned
Revelation 14:8; a third,
Revelation 14:9. These denote
great messengers of God, with
their assistants. The first
exhorts to the fear and worship
of God, the second proclaims the
fall of Babylon, the third gives
warning concerning the beast.
Happy were they who made a right
use of these divine messages!
Fly — Or flying, going on
swiftly; in the midst of heaven
— Through the air; having the
everlasting gospel to preach
unto every nation and people —
Both to Jews and Gentiles, even
as far as the authority of the
beast had extended. In the
fourth and fifth verses the
nature and character of the true
Christian Church, in opposition
to the wicked antichristian
kingdom, were described; and
here it is predicted that three
principal efforts would be made
toward a reformation at three
different times, represented by
the three angels appearing one
after another. Or, that the
gospel, here said to be
everlasting, because, like its
Divine Author, it is the same
yesterday, to- day, and for
ever, should be preached during
this period, in opposition to
the novel doctrines of the beast
and the false prophet, which
should be rooted up, Matthew
15:13. And the swiftness with
which the gospel should be
disseminated and spread over the
world, is admirably represented
by the swift flight of the first
angel; and the nature of the
doctrine, and the earnestness
wherewith it should be
especially inculcated, is set
forth by the first clause of the
next verse; saying, with a loud
voice — That is, urging in the
most zealous and forcible
manner, Fear God, and give glory
to him, who made heaven, earth,
the sea, &c. — Revere, stand in
awe of, dread to offend,
worship, and serve him; for the
hour of his judgment is come —
It is now denounced with
certainty, and in due time will
be fully executed on the
impenitent, unbelieving, and
disobedient. “It is,” says
Bishop Newton, “a solemn and
emphatic exhortation to forsake
the reigning idolatry and
superstition, and such
exhortations were made even in
the first and earliest times of
the beast. Besides several of
the Greek emperors, who
strenuously opposed the worship
of images, Charlemagne himself
held a council at Frankfort in
the year 794, consisting of
about three hundred French, and
German, and Italian, and
Spanish, and British bishops,
who condemned all sorts of
adoration or worship of images,
and rejected the second council
of Nice, which had authorized
and established it. At the same
time the Caroline books, as they
are called, four books written
by Charles himself, or by his
authority, proving the worship
of images to be contrary to the
Scripture, and to the doctrine
and practice of antiquity, were
approved by the council, and
transmitted to the pope. Lewis
the Pious, the son and successor
of Charles, held a council at
Paris, in the year 824, which
ratified the acts of the council
of Frankfort, and the Caroline
books, and affirmed that,
according to the Scripture and
the fathers, adoration was due
to God alone. Several private
persons also taught and asserted
the same Scriptural doctrines.
Claude, bishop of Turin,
declares, that ‘we are not
commanded to go to the creature
that we may be made happy, but
to the Creator himself; and
therefore we should not worship
dead men; they are to be
imitated, not to be adored; let
us, together with the angels,
worship one God.’ Agobard,
archbishop of Lyons, wrote a
whole book against images, and
says, that ‘angels or saints may
be loved and honoured, but not
be served and worshipped; let us
not put our trust in man, but in
God, lest that prophetic
denunciation should redound on
us, Cursed is the man who
trusteth in man.’ Many other
bishops and writers of Britain,
Spain, Italy, Germany, and
France, professed the same
sentiments; and this public
opposition of emperors and
bishops to the worship of saints
and images, in the eighth and
ninth centuries, appears to be
meant particularly by the loud
voice of this first angel flying
aloft, and calling upon the
world to worship God. In another
respect, too, these emperors and
bishops resemble this angel
having the everlasting gospel to
preach unto every nation; for in
their time, and greatly by their
means, the Christian religion
was propagated and established
among the Saxons, Danes, Swedes,
and many other northern
nations.”
Verse 8
Revelation 14:8. And there
followed another angel — As the
admonitions of the first angel
had not the proper effect upon
the kingdom of the beast, a
second angel is commissioned to
proclaim the fall of the capital
city, saying, Babylon is fallen,
is fallen, that great city — By
Babylon is meant Rome, including
the antichristian kingdom, the
papal hierarchy seated there.
Rome, considered in this light,
is called Babylon, upon many
accounts. Babylon was
magnificent, strong, proud,
powerful. So was Rome also.
Babylon was first, Rome
afterward, the residence of the
emperors of a great part of the
world. What Babylon was to
Israel of old, Rome hath been
both to the literal and
spiritual Israel of God. Hence
the liberty of the ancient Jews
was connected with the overthrow
of the Babylonish empire. And
when Rome is finally overthrown,
then the people of God will be
at liberty. Whenever Babylon is
mentioned in this book, the
great is added, to teach us that
Rome then commenced Babylon when
it commenced the great city;
when it swallowed up the Grecian
monarchy and its fragments,
Syria in particular; and, in
consequence of this, obtained
dominion over Jerusalem, about
sixty years before the birth of
Christ. Then it began, but it
will not cease to be Babylon,
till it is finally destroyed.
Its spiritual greatness began in
the fifth century, and increased
from age to age. It seems it
will come to its utmost height
just before its final overthrow.
Her fornication is her idolatry,
invocation of saints and angels,
worship of images, human
traditions, with all that
outward pomp, yea, and that
fierce and bloody zeal,
wherewith she pretends to serve
God. But with spiritual
fornication, as elsewhere, so in
Rome, fleshly fornication is
joined abundantly. Witness the
stews there, licensed by the
pope, which are no
inconsiderable branch of his
revenue. This is fitly compared
to wine, because of its
intoxicating nature. Of this
wine she hath, indeed, made all
nations drink — More especially
by her later missions. We may
observe, this making them drink
is not ascribed to the beast,
but to Babylon. For Rome itself,
the Roman inquisitions,
congregations, and Jesuits,
continually propagate their
idolatrous doctrines and
practices, with or without the
consent of this or that pope,
who himself is not secure from
their censure. But, as Bishop
Newton observes, though Rome,
with the antichristian power
above described, was evidently
here intended, it would not have
been prudent to predict and
denounce its destruction in open
and direct terms; it was for
many wise reasons done thus
covertly under the name of
Babylon, the great idolatress of
the earth, and enemy of the
people of God in former times.
By the same figure of speech
that the first angel cried, that
the hour of his judgment is
come, this second angel
proclaims that Babylon is
fallen; the sentence is as
certain as if it was already
executed. For greater certainty
too it is repeated twice,
Babylon is fallen, is fallen; as
Joseph said, Genesis 41:32, that
the dream was doubled unto
Pharaoh twice, because the thing
was established by God. The
reason then is added of this
sentence against Babylon;
because she made all nations
drink of the wine of her wrath,
or rather, of the inflaming
wine, of her fornication — Hers
was a kind of Circean cup with
poisoned liquor, to intoxicate
and inflame mankind to spiritual
fornication. St. John, in these
figures, copies the ancient
prophets. In the same manner,
and in the same words, did
Isaiah foretel the fate of
ancient Babylon, (Isaiah 21:9,)
Babylon is fallen, is fallen;
and Jeremiah hath assigned much
the same reason for her
destruction, (Jeremiah 51:7,)
Babylon hath been a golden cup
in the Lord’s hand, that made
all the earth drunken: the
nations have drunken of her
wine; therefore the nations are
mad. As by the first angel
calling upon men to worship God,
we understand the opposers of
the worship of images in the
eighth and ninth centuries, so
by this second angel proclaiming
the fall of mystic Babylon or
Rome we understand particularly
Peter Valdo, and those who
concurred with him among the
Waldenses and Albigenses; who
were the first heralds, as I may
say, of this proclamation, as
they first of all, in the
twelfth century, pronounced the
Church of Rome to be the
apocalyptic Babylon, the mother
of harlots and abominations of
the earth; and for this cause
not only departed from her
communion themselves, but
engaged great numbers also to
follow their example, and laid
the first foundation of the
Reformation. Rome then began to
fall; and as the ruin of Babylon
was completed by degrees, so
likewise will that of Rome; and
these holy confessors and
martyrs first paved the way to
it.
Verses 9-12
Revelation 14:9-12. And the
third angel followed — At no
great distance of time; saying —
As the two former had done; with
a loud voice — With authority
and earnestness; If any man
worship the beast, &c. — The
commission of this angel reaches
further than that of the
preceding; it extends not only
to the capital city, not only to
the principal agents and
promoters of idolatry, but to
all the subjects of the beast,
whom it consigns over to
everlasting punishment. If any
man worship the beast — That is,
embrace and profess the religion
of the beast; or, what is the
same, the religion of the Papal
hierarchy; the same shall drink,
&c. — The worship against which
judgment is here denounced,
consists partly in an inward
submission to the beast, a
persuasion that all who are
subject to Christ must be
subject to the beast, or they
cannot receive the influences of
divine grace; or, as their
expression is, “There is no
salvation out of the church;”
and partly in a suitable outward
reverence to the beast and his
image — the antichristian
kingdom, and the pope that rules
in it. The same shall drink of
the wine of the wrath of God —
The wine of God’s indignation,
tempered with various
ingredients of wrath; which is
poured out without mixture —
Namely, of mercy, and without
hope. Bishop Newton renders the
expression, the poisonous wrath
of God; observing, “His
punishment shall correspond with
his crime; as he drank of the
poisonous wine of Babylon, so he
shall be made to drink of the
poisonous wine of God; του
κεκερασμενου ακρατου, which is
mixed unmixed, the poisonous
ingredients being stronger when
mixed with mere, or unmixed
wine;” in the cup of his
indignation; and he shall be
tormented with fire and
brimstone — In the day of God’s
future vengeance; in the
presence of the holy angels —
From hence some conjecture that
possibly the torments of the
damned may, at certain seasons,
through eternal ages, become a
spectacle to the inhabitants of
the blessed world above; and in
the presence of the Lamb — This
signifies that their punishment
shall not only be appointed by
the infinite majesty of God, but
approved moreover by men and
angels, and by him also who
loved us unto death, even
Christ, our merciful and
compassionate High-Priest. In
all the Scriptures there is not
another threatening so terrible
as this. And God, by this
greater fear, intended to arm
his servants against the fear of
the beast. The smoke of their
torment ascendeth up for ever
and ever — “When I seriously
reflect on this text,” says
Doddridge, “and how directly the
force of it lies against those
who, contrary to the light of
their consciences, continue in
the communion of the Church of
Rome for secular advantage, or
to avoid the terror of
persecution, it almost makes me
tremble.” By this third angel
following the others with a loud
voice, we may understand
principally Luther and his
fellow-reformers, who, with a
loud voice, protested against
the corruptions of the Church of
Rome, and declared them to be
destructive of salvation to all
who obstinately continued in the
practice and profession of them.
This would be a time of great
trial, Revelation 14:12. Here is
the patience of the saints —
Manifested in suffering all
things, rather than receive this
mark of the beast, the badge of
their devotedness to him, and
making an open profession of his
religion; who keep the
commandments of God, and the
faith of Jesus — The character
of all true saints. It is very
well known that this was a time
of great trial and persecution;
the Reformation was not
introduced and established
without much bloodshed; there
were many martyrs in every
country, but they were comforted
with a solemn declaration from
heaven in the next words.
Verse 13
Revelation 14:13. And I heard a
voice from heaven — This is most
seasonably heard when the beast
is in his highest power and
fury; saying unto me, Write — He
was at first commanded to write
the whole book. Whenever this is
repeated, it denotes something
peculiarly observable. Blessed —
΄ακαριοι, happy, are the dead
which die in the Lord — In the
faith of the Lord Jesus Christ;
and, in consequence of that
faith, in a state of vital union
with him, he being thereby made
of God unto them wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification,
and redemption, and thereby
imparting unto them, 1st, A
satisfactory knowledge of the
nature and greatness of their
future felicity, in their
illumination; 2d, A title to it,
in their justification; 3d, A
meetness for it, in their
sanctification; and, 4th,
Bringing them to the enjoyment
of it, in their complete
redemption from all the
consequences of the fall; from
henceforth — Particularly, 1st,
Because they escape the
approaching calamities, or are
taken away from the evil to
come, as the expression is,
Isaiah 57:1-2, to which passage
there seems to be an allusion
here; 2d, Because they already
enjoy so near an approach to,
and indeed an anticipation of,
glory — the glory to be
conferred at the second coming
of Christ, and the resurrection
of the dead; for they rest — No
pain, no purgatory follows; but
pure and unmixed happiness; from
their labours — And the more
laborious their life was, the
sweeter is their rest. How
different is this state from
that of those (Revelation 14:11)
who have no rest day nor night!
Reader, which wilt thou choose?
And their works — Each one’s
peculiar works, done from a
principle of faith and love,
with a single eye to the glory
of God, and in a spirit of
humility before God, resignation
to his will, and patience under
all trials and sufferings; and
in meekness, gentleness, and
long-suffering toward those who
oppose them in their Christian
course of cheerfully doing good,
and patiently suffering ill;
follow them — And will be
produced as evidences of their
faith and love; or of the
genuineness of their religion at
the day of judgment. But the
words, τα εργα αυτων ακολουθει
μετ’ αυτων, properly signify,
their works follow with them, or
follow them immediately; that
is, the fruit of their works;
they reap this, in some measure,
immediately on their admission
into paradise. Observe, reader,
their works do not go before, to
procure for them admittance into
the mansions of joy and glory,
but they follow or attend them
when admitted. Bishop Newton
accounts for the expression,
From henceforth, blessed are the
dead, &c., by observing, that
though from the time of the
Reformation, “the blessedness of
the dead who die in the Lord
hath not been enlarged, yet it
hath been much better
understood, more clearly written
and promulgated than it was
before, and the contrary
doctrine of purgatory hath been
exploded and banished from the
belief of all reasonable men.
This truth,” adds he, “was
moreover one of the leading
principles of the Reformation.
What first provoked Luther’s
spirit was the scandalous sale
of indulgences; and the doctrine
of indulgences having a close
connection with the doctrine of
purgatory, the refutation of the
one naturally leads to the
refutation of the other; and his
first work of reformation was
his ninety-five theses, or
positions, against indulgences,
purgatory, and the dependent
doctrines. So that he may be
said literally to have fulfilled
the command from heaven, of
writing, Blessed are the dead,
&c., and from that time to this,
this truth hath been so clearly
asserted, and so solemnly
established, that it is likely
to prevail for ever.” But though
what the bishop here states
might be one reason of the
expression, from henceforth
blessed, &c., yet the principal
reason of its being used seems
evidently to have been that
above suggested, namely, to
intimate that the sufferings
which the people of God would be
exposed to at this period, from
the persecutions of the
antichristian power, would be so
great that those individuals who
escaped them by being taken out
of the world by death before
they came, would have reason to
think themselves happy.
Verses 14-16
Revelation 14:14-16. And I
looked, and behold a white cloud
— An emblem of the equity and
holiness, as also of the victory
of him that sat upon it, over
all adverse power; and upon the
cloud one like unto the Son of
man — By the majesty of his
form, as represented in Daniel;
having on his head a golden
crown — Signifying his high
dignity, his extraordinary
authority and power; and a sharp
sickle in his hand — As if going
forth to reap some remarkable
harvest. And another angel came
out of the temple — Which is in
heaven, (Revelation 14:17,) out
of which came the judgments of
God in the proper seasons;
crying, by the command of God,
with a loud voice, Thrust in thy
sickle and reap, for the time is
come, &c. — Namely, the
appointed time of judgment, for
which the world is ripe; the
voices of the three warning
angels, spoken of from
Revelation 14:6-11, not having
their due effect, it is here
predicted that the judgments of
God would overtake the followers
and adherents of the beast,
which judgments are represented
in this paragraph under the
figures of harvest and vintage,
figures not unusual in the
prophets, and copied
particularly from the Prophet
Joel, who denounced God’s
judgments against the enemies of
his people in the like terms,
Joel 3:13, saying, Put ye in the
sickle, for the harvest is ripe;
come, get you down, for the
press is full, the fats overflow
for their wickedness is great.
“Having passed,” says Mr. Faber,
“the epoch of the Reformation,
we now advance into the times of
God’s last judgments upon his
enemies, the days of the third
wo-trumpet. Two remarkable
periods of the most conspicuous
of these judgments (the several
steps of the whole of which are
afterward described under seven
vials) are here arranged under
the two grand divisions
figuratively styled the harvest
and the vintage. In the days of
Bishop Newton the third
wo-trumpet had not begun to
sound. Hence his lordship justly
observed, ‘What particular
events are signified by this
harvest and vintage, it appears
impossible for any man to
determine; time alone can with
certainty discover, for these
things are yet in futurity. Only
it may be observed, that these
two signal judgments will as
certainly come, as harvest and
vintage succeed in their season;
and in the course of providence
the one will precede the other,
as in the course of nature the
harvest is before the vintage;
and the latter will greatly
surpass the former, and be
attended with a most terrible
destruction of God’s enemies.’
But although both these signal
judgments were future when
Bishop Newton wrote, it has been
our lot to hear the voice of the
third wo, and to behold in the
French revolution the dreadful
scenes of the harvest. Still,
however, a more dreadful
prospect extends before us. The
days of the vintage are yet
future; for the time hath not
yet arrived when the great
controversy of God with the
nations shall be carried on
between the two seas, in the
neighbourhood of the glorious
holy mountain, in the
blood-stained vale of Megiddo,
in the land whose space extends
one thousand six hundred
furlongs.” Mr. Faber, therefore,
considers the harvest and the
vintage here as predicting “two
tremendous manifestations of
God’s wrath, two seasons of
peculiar misery;” and that the
apostle gives here only a
general intimation of these,
reserving a more particular
account of them for future
consideration under the pouring
out of the seven vials, which
are all comprehended under the
third wo, and which he divides
into three classes; the vials of
the harvest, the intermediate
vials, and the vials of the
vintage. — Dissertation on the
Prophecies, vol. 2. pages 378
and 382, edition 1810. Whether
and how far these views of Mr.
Faber appear to be just and
consistent with the general
tenor of this latter part of the
prophecy, we shall be better
able to judge when we come to
consider the contents of the two
next chapters.
Verses 17-20
Revelation 14:17-20. And another
angel came out of the temple
which is in heaven — As the
former had done; he also having
a sharp sickle — To assist in
this execution, and finish the
destruction of the enemies of
the truth. And another angel,
just at that instant, came out
from the altar — Of
burnt-offering, from whence the
martyrs had cried for vengeance.
Which angel, it is said, had
power over fire — This,
according to Daubuz, is spoken
in allusion to the office of
that priest who was appointed by
lot in the temple-service to
take care of the fire upon the
altar, and who was therefore
called the priest over the fire.
Grotius interprets it, habens
ministerium irę divinę, having
the office of God’s vengeance.
And he cried with a loud voice —
With great vehemence; to him
that had the sharp sickle —
Being sent to bring a message to
him; saying, Thrust in thy sharp
sickle, and gather the clusters,
&c. — Begin to put in execution
the righteous judgments of God
on this wicked generation; for
her grapes are fully ripe — The
time of God’s vengeance, his
appointed time, is fully come,
for the iniquities of the
inhabitants of the earth have
made them fully ripe for
destruction. And the angel
thrust in his sickle —
Immediately upon this order the
angel began to cut down those
wicked persons whose iniquities
had made them ripe for
destruction; and gathered — Or
lopped off the grapes of the
vine of the earth, and cast them
into the great wine- press of
the wrath of God — Which seemed
to stand ready to receive them;
that is, delivered them over to
divine vengeance, which should
press them hard with grievous
afflictions, as grapes are
pressed in a wine-press. And the
wine-press was trodden without
the city — The images in this
vision are very strong and
expressive. The largest
wine-presses used to be in some
places out of the city. This
expression, therefore, seems to
intimate the great numbers that
should be involved in this
general destruction. And the
blood came out of the wine-press
even unto the horses-bridles,
&c. — Which is a strong
hyperbolical expression, to
signify a vast slaughter and
effusion of blood; a way of
speaking not unknown to the
Jews, for the Jerusalem Talmud,
describing the woful slaughter
which the Roman Emperor Adrian
made of the Jews at the
destruction of the city of
Bitter, saith, that “the horses
waded in blood up to the
nostrils.” Nor are similar
examples wanting even in classic
authors; for Silius Italicus,
speaking of Hannibal’s descent
into Italy, useth a like
expression of “the bridles
flowing with much blood.” The
stage where this bloody tragedy
is acted is without the city, by
the space of a thousand and six
hundred furlongs, which, as Mr.
Mede ingeniously observes, is
the measure of stato dello
chiesa, or the state of the
Roman Church, or St. Peter’s
patrimony, which, reaching from
the walls of Rome unto the river
Po and the marshes of Verona,
contains the space of two
hundred Italian miles, which
make exactly sixteen hundred
furlongs. |