Verses 1-3
Revelation 20:1-3. And I saw an
angel — An especial minister of
Providence; come down from
heaven — With a commission from
God; having the key of the
bottomless pit — Invested with
power to open or to shut it; see
on Revelation 9:1; and a great
chain in his hand — Emblematical
of his power to perform the work
here assigned him. And he laid
hold on the dragon — Who, after
the destruction of the beast and
of the false prophet, (to whom
he had delegated his power,)
still remained; that old serpent
— That ancient enemy of the
human race, who, in the form of
a subtle serpent, deceived the
first parents of mankind, and
brought sin and death into the
world, with an incalculable
train of evils attendant on
them; who is the Devil — The
malicious and false accuser of
God’s saints, as the word
διαβολος, so rendered,
signifies; and Satan — The grand
adversary both of God and man;
and bound him a thousand years —
That is, at least one thousand
literal years; during which the
light of the gospel shall be
diffused through all the world,
and the reign of truth and
righteousness be established
universally among men. “I
think,” says Doddridge, “we must
despair of being able to
interpret any passage of
Scripture upon the plainest
principle of reason, if this do
not signify that there shall be
such a period as this, in which
Satan shall be remarkably
restrained, and the Christian
interest shall prevail. But
whether the one thousand years
are here to be taken literally,
as is most probable; or whether
here [as elsewhere in this book]
each day is put for a year, and
consequently the whole period be
three hundred and sixty thousand
years, I will not pretend to
determine. This thought has been
very lately started by an
ingenious and worthy person,
who, I doubt not, hath intended
the service of Christianity;
though I am very apprehensive he
has failed in some of the
mediums by which he has
endeavoured to prove this
point.” And cast him into the
bottomless pit — His infernal
prison; afterward he is cast
into the lake of fire; and shut
him up therein, and set a seal
upon him — These are strong
figures, to show the certain,
strict, and severe restraint
which he shall be laid under;
that he might deceive the
nations no more — During this
whole period. One benefit only
is here expressed as resulting
from the confinement of Satan;
but how many and great blessings
are implied! For the grand enemy
and opposer of truth and
righteousness being removed, the
kingdom of God holds on its
uninterrupted course among the
nations; and the great mystery
of God, so long foretold, is at
length fulfilled — Namely, when
the beast and false prophet are
destroyed, and Satan bound. This
fulfilment approaches nearer and
nearer, and contains things of
the utmost importance, the
knowledge of which becomes every
day more distinct and easy. In
the mean time, it is highly
necessary to guard against the
present rage and subtlety of the
devil; remembering that the
events which are to precede the
binding of him, and the
commencing of these one thousand
years, are awful, and shortly to
be expected, one after another,
namely, the calamities implied
in the vintage, (Revelation
14:18,) the pouring out of the
last three vials, the judgment
of Babylon, the last raging of
the beast and false prophet, and
their destruction. How great
things are these! and how short
the time! What is needful for
us? Wisdom, patience,
faithfulness, watchfulness.
Surely this is not a time for us
to settle upon our lees. This,
if it be rightly understood,
will not be an acceptable
message to the wise, the mighty,
the honourable of this world.
Yet that which is to be done
shall be done: there is no
counsel against the Lord. After
that he must be loosed — So does
the mysterious wisdom of God
permit; for a little season —
For a small time, comparatively:
though, upon the whole, it
cannot be very short, because
the things that are to be
transacted therein (see
Revelation 20:8-9) must take up
a considerable space.
Verses 4-6
Revelation 20:4-6. And I saw
thrones — Such as were promised
to the apostles, Matthew 19:28;
Luke 22:30; and they — Namely,
the saints, whom St. John saw at
the same time; sat upon them,
and judgment was given to them —
1 Corinthians 6:2. Error and sin
being restrained, the reign of
righteousness succeeds, and the
administration of justice and
judgment is given to the saints
of the Most High, Daniel 7:22.
And I saw the souls — That is,
the persons; of them that were
beheaded — Namely, with the axe,
as the word πεπελεκισμενων
properly signifies: one kind of
death, however, which was
particularly inflicted at Rome,
is mentioned for all kinds
thereof: for the witness, or
testimony, of Jesus — For
testifying that Jesus of
Nazareth is the true Messiah,
the Son of God, the Saviour,
Lawgiver, and final Judge of the
world, and especially of those
who believe in him; and for the
word of God — In general, or for
some particular and peculiarly
important truth of it; or for
bearing witness to the great
truths of the everlasting
gospel; and who had not
worshipped the beast — Had not
made any acknowledgment of
subjection to the antichristian
power of the beast, nor yielded
to the prevailing corruptions;
nor his image — The pope and his
corrupt hierarchy; but had
persevered in the true Christian
faith against all opposition.
See on Revelation 13:4-8;
Revelation 13:11-17. Neither had
received his mark in their
foreheads, or on their hands —
Had neither made an open
profession of his corrupt
religion, nor had secretly
complied with its idolatries or
superstitions. And they lived —
Their souls and bodies being
reunited; and reigned with
Christ — It is not said, on
earth. Doubtless the meaning is,
that they ascended and reigned
with him in heaven; a thousand
years — Namely, before the rest
of the dead, even the one
thousand years during which
Satan is bound, and truth and
righteousness prevail over all
the earth.
Although the martyrs, when thus
raised from the dead, shall not
continue on earth, it is highly
probable that, in proof of their
resurrection, they will appear
to pious individuals, in the
places where they were so
cruelly martyred, and where they
are raised: as those saints who,
at Jerusalem, rose with Christ,
went into the city, and appeared
to many, Matthew 27:52-53. And
if so, it is likely this
circumstance will tend greatly
to confirm the faith and hope of
believers respecting the
resurrection of the dead, and
will check vice and profaneness,
and contribute much to the
spread of the gospel. “The
martyrs and confessors of
Jesus,” says Bishop Newton, “who
are here represented as being
raised from the dead, at least
one thousand years before
others, are not only those who
were beheaded, or suffered any
kind of death, under the heathen
Roman emperors, but also those
who refused to comply with the
idolatrous worship of the beast
and his image. All these have
this peculiar prerogative above
the rest of mankind: they all
share in this first
resurrection. And all of them
the apostle here pronounces,
Blessed and holy is he that hath
part in the first resurrection —
He is holy in all senses of the
word: holy, as separated from
the common lot of mankind; holy,
as endowed with all virtuous
qualifications; and none but
such are admitted to partake of
this blessed state. On such the
second death has no power — The
second death is a Jewish phrase
for the punishment of the wicked
after death. The Chaldee
paraphrase of Onkelos, and the
other paraphrases of Jonathan
Ben Uzziel, and of Jerusalem, on
Deuteronomy 33:6, Let Reuben
live, and not die, say, Let him
not die the second death, by
which the wicked die in the
world to come.
The sons of the resurrection,
therefore, shall not die again,
but shall live in eternal bliss,
and be priests of God and
Christ, and reign with him a
thousand years” — Before any
others. For the Lord Jesus will
not suffer any of his disciples
to be, in the end, losers for
their fidelity to him and his
cause. These loved not their
lives unto death, but
voluntarily sacrificed them out
of love to him; and he thus
amply recompenses them. He gives
each of them an infinitely
better life than that given up
for his sake — and this a
thousand years before the other
pious dead receive theirs.
“Nothing is more evident,” says
Bishop Newton, “than that this
prophecy of the millennium, and
of the first resurrection, hath
not yet been fulfilled, even
though the resurrection be taken
in a figurative sense. For
reckon the thousand years from
the time of Christ, or reckon
them from the time of
Constantine, yet neither of
these periods, nor indeed any
other, will answer the
description and character of the
millennium, the purity and
peace, the holiness and
happiness of that blessed state.
Before Constantine, indeed, the
church was in greater purity;
but was groaning under the
persecutions of the heathen
emperors. After Constantine, the
church was in greater
prosperity, but was soon shaken
and disturbed by heresies and
schisms, by the incursions and
devastations of the northern
nations, by the conquering arms
and prevailing imposture of the
Saracens, and afterward of the
Turks; by the corruption,
idolatry, and wickedness — the
usurpation, tyranny, and
cruelty, of the Church of Rome.
If Satan was then bound, when
can he be said to be loosed? Or
how could the saints and the
beast, Christ and antichrist,
reign at the same period? This
prophecy therefore remains to be
fulfilled, even though the
resurrection be taken only for
an allegory, which yet the text
cannot admit without the
greatest torture and violence.
For with what propriety can it
be said, that some of the dead,
who were beheaded, lived and
reigned with Christ a thousand
years, but the rest of the dead
lived not again until the
thousand years were finished,
unless the dying and living
again be the same in both
places, a proper death and
resurrection? Indeed the death
and resurrection of the
witnesses before mentioned,
chap. 11., appears, from the
concurrent circumstances of the
vision, to be figurative; but
the death and resurrection here
mentioned must, for the very
same reasons, be concluded to be
real. If the martyrs rise only
in a spiritual sense, then the
rest of the dead rise only in a
spiritual sense; but if the rest
of the dead really rise, the
martyrs rise in the same manner.
There is no difference between
them: and we should be cautious
and tender of making the first
resurrection an allegory, lest
others should reduce the second
into an allegory too, like those
whom St. Paul mentions 2 Timothy
2:17-18.
In the general, that there shall
be such a happy period is the
plain and express doctrine of
Daniel 7:27; Psalms 2:8; Isaiah
11:9; Romans 11:25-26, and of
all the prophets, as well as of
St. John; and we daily pray for
the accomplishment of it in
saying, Thy kingdom come. But,
of all the prophets, St. John is
the only one who hath declared
particularly, and in express
terms, that the martyrs shall
rise at the commencement of it,
though, as has been observed,
probably not to remain on earth,
but to ascend and be with Christ
in heaven; and that this happy
state of the church shall
continue for one thousand years.
And the Jewish Church before
him, and the Christian Church
after him, have further believed
and taught, that these thousand
years will be the seventh
millenary of the world. A
pompous heap of quotations might
be produced to this purpose,
both from Jewish and Christian
writers; but to enumerate only a
few of both sorts: among the
Jewish writers are, Rabbi
Ketina, and the house of Elias;
among the Christian writers are,
St. Barnabas in the first
century, Justin Martyr in the
second century, Tertullian in
the beginning of the third, and
Lactantius in the beginning of
the fourth century. In short,
the doctrine of the millennium
was generally believed in the
first three and purest ages of
the church: and this belief was
one principal cause of the
fortitude of the primitive
Christians: they even coveted
martyrdom, in hopes of being
partakers of the privileges and
glories of the martyrs in the
first resurrection. Afterward,
this doctrine grew into
disrepute, for various reasons.
Some, both Jewish and Christian
writers, have debased it with a
mixture of fables. It hath
suffered by the
misrepresentations of its
enemies, as well as by the
indiscretions of its friends; it
hath been abused to the worst
purposes: it hath been made an
engine of faction. Besides,
wherever the influence and
authority of the Church of Rome
have extended, she hath
endeavoured by all means to
discredit this doctrine; and,
indeed, not without sufficient
reason, this kingdom of Christ
being founded on the ruins of
antichrist. No wonder,
therefore, that this doctrine
lay depressed for many ages; but
it sprang up again at the
Reformation, and will flourish
together with the study of the
Revelation. All the danger is,
on the one side, of pruning and
lopping it too short; and, on
the other, of suffering it to
grow too wild and luxuriant.
Great caution and judgment are
required to keep in the middle
way. We should neither, with
some, interpret into an
allegory; nor, with others,
indulge an extravagant fancy,
nor explain too curiously the
manner and circumstances of this
future state.
We must not imagine, as Fleming
observes, that the appearance of
Christ, to introduce this
glorious state of the church,
will be a personal one, any more
than his appearance to destroy
Jerusalem, and punish the Jewish
nation by Titus, was such; for
the heavens must retain him
until the time of the
restitution of all things. Nor
are we to imagine that, in this
prosperous state of the church,
it shall be free from all
mixture of hypocrisy, error, and
sin, seeing that the sudden and
general apostacy which will
follow that period shows that
all were not Israel that feigned
themselves to be of it;
otherwise it is not likely that
God, in his equity and goodness,
would suffer the enemies of his
people so dreadfully to assault
them as they are here
represented to do. It is safest
and best faithfully to adhere to
the words of Scripture, and to
rest contented with the general
account, till time shall
accomplish and eclaircise all
the particulars.
Verses 7-10
Revelation 20:7-10. The
following verses of this chapter
to Revelation 20:11 inform us
that the happy days of the
church, prophesied of in the
foregoing vision, will at length
have their period, though they
are to continue for a long time,
and are not to expire till after
one thousand years: yet then
there shall be one attempt more
against the purity of religion,
and against the peace and
prosperity of the church. Satan
will be released for a little
season, but in that little
season he shall deceive many,
and so far seduce them as to
prevail upon them to join with
him in his apostacy. This new
attempt against truth and
righteousness shall end in the
utter ruin of the enemies of
Christ and his religion; they
shall be totally defeated, and
their obstinate wickedness
punished with everlasting
destruction. This state of the
church and world, so different
from the preceding, deserves to
be considered as a new period,
which will therefore be the
fifth in order. — Lowman. And
when the thousand years are
expired, &c. — “At the
expiration of the thousand years
the restraint shall be taken off
from wickedness; Satan shall be
loosed out of his prison — And
make one effort more to
re-establish his kingdom. As he
deceived our first parents in
the paradisiacal state, so he
shall have the artifice to
deceive the nations in this
millennium kingdom, to show that
no state or condition on earth
is exempted or secured from
sinning.
The nations whom he shall
deceive are described as living
in the remotest parts of the
world; in the four quarters — εν
ταις τεσσαρσι γωνιαις της γης,
in the four angles, or corners,
of the earth; and they are
distinguished by the name of Gog
and Magog, and are said to be as
numerous as the sands of the
sea. Gog and Magog seem to have
been formerly the general name
of the northern nations of
Europe and Asia, as the
Scythians have been since, and
the Tartars are at present. In
Ezekiel there is a famous
prophecy concerning Gog and
Magog, and this prophecy alludes
to that in many particulars.
Both that of Ezekiel and this of
St. John remain yet to be
fulfilled; and therefore we
cannot be absolutely certain
that they may not both relate to
the same event, but it appears
more probable that they relate
to different events. The one is
expected to take place before,
but the other will not take
place till after, the
millennium. Gog and Magog, in
Ezekiel, are said expressly
(Ezekiel 38:6; Ezekiel 38:15;
Ezekiel 39:2) to come from the
north quarters and the north
parts; but in St. John they came
from the four quarters, or
corners, of the earth. Gog and
Magog, in Ezekiel, bend their
forces against the Jews
resettled in their own land; but
in St. John they march up
against the saints and church of
God in general. It may therefore
be concluded that Gog and Magog,
as well as Sodom, and Egypt, and
Babylon, are mystic names in
this book; and the last enemies
of the Christian Church are so
denominated, because Gog and
Magog appear to be the last
enemies of the Jewish nation.
Who they shall be, we cannot
pretend to say with any degree
of certainty: but whoever they
shall be, they shall come up
from the four corners of the
earth, on the breadth of the
earth, and shall compass the
camp of the saints about, and
the beloved city — The new
Jerusalem, with the saints
encamped around it, as the
Israelites encamped around the
tabernacle in the wilderness.
But they shall not succeed in
their attempts; they shall not
be able to hurt the church and
city of God, but shall be
destroyed in an extraordinary
manner, by fire from heaven: and
the devil himself, the promoter
and leader of this new apostacy
and rebellion against God and
his Christ, shall not only be
confined as before, but shall be
cast into the lake of fire and
brimstone, where he shall be
punished together with the beast
and the false prophet, who were
cast in before him, and shall be
tormented for ever and ever.
Verse 11
Revelation 20:11. The course of
these prophecies, after many
important visions describing the
state of the church and world in
this present life, brings us at
last to the great and final
judgment, when the whole scene
and mystery of Providence shall
be finished. Then the great
doctrine which runs through the
whole of these prophecies will
be fully verified, namely, that
truth and righteousness shall
surely prevail in the end,
against error and all iniquity;
eternal happiness shall be the
reward of the faithful, and
everlasting destruction the
punishment of the wicked. This
is represented as a sixth period
of Providence, after which there
will be in the seventh period an
everlasting sabbath; a state of
eternal rest and happiness for
all the righteous, and of the
most perfect worship of God, in
the praises and devotions of the
heavenly church. — Lowman. And I
saw — A representation of the
great day of the Lord; a great
white throne — How great who can
say? White — With the glory of
God, and to show the holiness,
justice, and equity of him that
sits on it, the Lord Jesus. The
apostle does not attempt to
describe him here; he only adds
that circumstance, far above all
description; from whose face the
earth and the heaven fled away —
At least the aerial, if not also
the starry heaven; and there was
found no place for them — But
they were wholly dissolved; the
very elements melting with
fervent heat. It is not said
they were thrown into great
commotions, but they fell into
dissolution; not they removed to
a distant place, but there was
found no place for them: at
least as to their present state;
they ceased to exist, they were
no more. See on 2 Peter 3:7-13.
And all this, not at the strict
command of the Lord Jesus, not
at his awful presence, or before
his fiery indignation, but at
the bare presence of his
Majesty, sitting with severe,
but adorable dignity, on his
throne.
Verse 12
Revelation 20:12. And I saw the
dead, small and great — Of every
age and condition, rank and
degree; as well those who
perished at sea, and were buried
in the waters, as those who died
on land, and were buried in
graves: all are raised, and
stand before the judgment-seat
of God, as also those who are
found alive at Christ’s second
coming, and undergo a change
equivalent to death, 1
Corinthians 15:51. All these
stand before their Judge,
whether they had been rich or
poor, kings or subjects, in one
grand assembly, waiting to
receive their final doom from
him who once stood at the bar of
a weak and sinful mortal, by
whom he was condemned to suffer
the ignominious and painful
death of crucifixion, but now,
how unlike: —
The babe of Bethlehem!
how unlike the man
That groan’d on Calvary!
Yet he it is;
That Man of sorrows!
O how changed!
And the books were opened — The
records of the Divine
Omniscience on the one hand, and
those of the sinners’
consciences on the other; and
the book of the natural law, the
rule by which those shall be
judged who had not been favoured
with the Holy Scriptures, and
the book of the revealed law,
including the Old Testament and
the New: by which they shall be
judged who were favoured, and as
far as they were favoured, with
these divine oracles. Human
judges have their books written
with pen and ink; but how
different is the nature of these
books, and how many hidden
things will be brought to light
when they are opened! And how
many will have a quite different
appearance, in the sight of men,
from what they had before? With
the book of God’s omniscience
that of conscience will exactly
tally. It is not said the books
will be read; the light of that
day will make them visible to
all: then particularly shall
every man know himself, and that
with the utmost exactness. This
will be the first true, full,
impartial, universal history
that was ever published. And
now, if these were the only
books that will be opened, no
flesh could be saved: for all
heathen will be found to have
violated the law of nature, or
to have fallen short of its
demands: all Jews to have
transgressed the law of Moses,
and to have contracted guilt
thereby, though in different
degrees; and all Christians, so
called, to have deviated, more
or less, from the spirituality
and strictness of the law of
Christ, at one time or another.
But another book was opened —
Wherein were enrolled all that
had turned to God in true
repentance and living faith, and
had been accepted in the
Beloved; had been both justified
and sanctified through the
mediation and grace of Christ,
and had lived and died in the
possession of that faith in God
and his truth, which worketh by
love. Which is the book of life
— That is, without a figure,
that divine wisdom or
remembrance, whereby the Lord
knows them that are his, namely,
them that, in the days of their
flesh, had been truly pardoned
and renewed in the spirit of
their minds; had been taken into
God’s favour, stamped with his
image, possessed of communion
with him, and had brought forth
the genuine fruits of
righteousness, by a patient
continuance in well-doing. All
these shall be acquitted at the
bar of Christ, and acknowledged
as his genuine followers.
Nevertheless even these shall be
judged out of those things which
were written in the books — That
is, in a manner agreeable to the
tenor of them; according to
their works — That is, according
as their spirit and conduct,
their intentions and affections,
their tempers, words, and
actions, had been agreeable or
disagreeable to the discoveries
which God had made to them of
his will. In other words their
reward shall be greater or less
in proportion to the degrees of
holiness which they had
attained, the endeavours they
had used to glorify God, and do
good to mankind in their
generation, and to the patience
and resignation wherewith they
had endured the various
sufferings which, in the course
of Divine Providence, they had
been called to sustain for the
trial of their grace, and to
render them examples of patience
to others. On the other hand,
those who are not found written
in the book of life, (Revelation
20:15,) who in the days of their
flesh did not turn to God in
repentance, faith, and new
obedience, and therefore were
not accepted of him through the
mediation of his Son, are cast
into the lake of fire, where
they are punished in different
degrees, according to their evil
works; that is, according to the
unholiness and unrighteousness
of their tempers, words, and
actions; their internal enmity
against, or unlikeness to God,
the dishonour they had done to
him, and the evil they had done
to their fellow-creatures by
their iniquitous conduct,
including their abuse of their
time and talents, of the
privileges afforded them, and
the various means used in vain
to reclaim and bring them to
repentance.
Verses 13-15
Revelation 20:13-15. And — That
none might be exempt from being
brought to judgment, the
resurrection extended even to
the waters; the sea — The lakes
and rivers; gave up the dead
which were in them, and, ο
θανατος και ο αδης, death and
hades — Or, the state of
separate souls, delivered up the
dead which were in them — Death
gave up all the bodies of men,
and hades their souls, to be
united to their bodies. And
death and hades were cast into
the lake of fire — That is, were
abolished for ever. For neither
the righteous nor the wicked
were to die any more; their
souls and bodies were to be no
more separated. Consequently
neither death nor hades could
any more have a being. Such is
the awful end of the whole human
race: they are plunged into that
flaming and eternal ruin
signified by the lake of fire,
or are received into those
abodes of glory, which are
described in the next two
chapters under the figures of a
new heaven and a new earth.
Here then we have before us a
most affecting view of those
important events in which we are
all most intimately, yea,
infinitely concerned; even the
illustrious day of the passing
away of the heaven and earth,
and the final judgment of all
mankind, whether small or great.
Therefore let all the living,
both small and great, seriously
weigh these things; let them
often look forward to the awful
period when the glorious throne
shall be set, the important
volumes opened, and our whole
lives, all our tempers, words,
and works, which are now
perfectly known to God, shall be
exhibited to the view of men,
angels, and devils. Let us,
therefore, judge ourselves
impartially, that we be not
condemned of the Lord; and,
conscious how unable we shall be
to stand in that judgment if he
were to lay justice to the line,
let us humbly and penitently
apply to the throne of mercy, to
the grace of the gospel
covenant, through the blood of
the Redeemer. So shall we find
mercy of the Lord in that day,
and reign with him, not a
thousand years only, but for
everlasting ages. In the mean
time, let those who have no
reverence for his majesty, nor
esteem for his gospel, and who
have never taken this awful
alarm, have never fled for
refuge to lay hold on the hope
set before them, tremble at
these awakening views. Let them
all, of every condition, both
small and great, say in their
hearts, Who shall dwell with
devouring flames, with
everlasting burnings? Shall we
have our portion in this lake of
fire, into which every one who
is not found written in the book
of life shall be cast? and shall
we be those wretched victims of
the divine justice, who shall be
tormented for ever and ever?
Nay, rather let us turn to God
in sincerity and truth that our
souls may live, and an entrance
be administered unto us into his
everlasting kingdom! |