Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
COMMENTARY ON
THE APOCALYPSE OF THE BLESSED JOHN
FROM THE FIRST CHAPTER.
1. "THE Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave to Him, and showed
unto His servants things which must shortly come to pass, and signified it.
Blessed are they who read and hear the words of this prophecy, and keep the
things which are written."] The beginning of the book promises blessing
to him that reads and hears and keeps, that he who takes pains about the reading
may thence learn to do works, and may keep the precepts.
4. "Grace unto you, and peace, from Him which is, and which was, and
which is to come."] He is, because He endures continually; He was, because
with the Father He made all things, and has at this time taken a beginning
from the Virgin; He is to come, because assuredly He will come to judgment. "And
from the seven spirits which are before His throne."] We read of a sevenfold
spirit in Isaiah,(1)--namely, the spirit of wisdom and of understanding, the
spirit of counsel and might, of knowledge and of piety, and the spirit of the
fear of the Lord.
5. "And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful witness, the first-begotten
of the dead."] In taking upon Him manhood, He gave a testimony in the
world, wherein also having suffered, He freed us by His blood from sin; and
having vanquished hell, He was the first who rose from the dead and "death
shall have no more dominion over Him,"(2) but by His own reign the kingdom
of the world is destroyed.
6. "And He made us a kingdom and priests unto God and His Father."]
That is to say, a Church of all believers; as also the Apostle Peter says: "A
holy nation, a royal priesthood."(3)
7. "Behold, He shall come with clouds, and every eye shall see Him."]
For He who at first came hidden in the manhood that He had undertaken, shall
after a little while come to judgment manifest in majesty and glory. And what
saith He?
12. "And I turned, and saw seven golden candlesticks; and in the midst
of the seven golden candlesticks one like unto the Son of man."] He says
that He was like Him after His victory over death, when He had ascended into
the heavens, after the union in His body of the power which He received from
the Father with the spirit of His glory.
13. "As it were the Son of man walking in the midst of the golden candlesticks."]
He says, in the midst of the churches, as it is said in Solomon, "I will
walk in the midst of the paths of the just,"(4) whose antiquity is immortality,
and the fountain of majesty.
"Clothed with a garment down to the ankles."]
In the long, that is, the priestly garment, these words very plainly deliver
the flesh which
was not corrupted in death, and has the priesthood through suffering.
"And He was girt about the paps with a golden girdle."]
His paps are the two testaments, and the golden girdle is the choir of saints,
as gold
tried in the fire. Otherwise the golden girdle bound around His breast indicates
the enlightened conscience, and the pure and spiritual apprehension that is
given to the churches.
14. "And His head and His hairs were white as it were white wool, and
as it were snow."] On the head the whiteness is shown; "but the head
of Christ is God."(5) in the white hairs is the multitude of abbots(6)
like to wool, in respect of simple sheep; to snow, in respect of the innumerable
crowd of candidates taught from heaven.
"His eyes were as a flame of fire."]
God's preceipts are those which minister light to believers, but to unbelievers
burning.
16. "And in His face was brightness as the sun."]
That which He called brightness was the appearance of that in which He spoke
to men face
to face. But the glory of the sun is less than the glory of the Lord. Doubtless
on account of its rising and setting, and rising again, that He was born and
suffered and rose again, therefore the Scripture gave this similitude, likening
His face to the glory of the sun.
15. "His feet were like unto yellow brass, as if burned in a furnace."]
He calls the apostles His feet, who, being wrought by suffering, preached His
word in the whole world; for He rightly named those by whose means the preaching
went forth, feet. Whence also the prophet anticipated this, and said: "We
will worship in the place where His feet have stood."(1) Because where
they first of all stood and confirmed the Church, that is, in Judea, all the
saints shall assemble together, and will worship their Lord.
16. "And out of His mouth was issuing a sharp two-edged sword."]
By the twice-sharpened sword going forth out of His mouth is shown, that it
is He Himself who has both now declared the word of the Gospel, and previously
by Moses declared the knowledge of the law to the whole world. But because
from the same word, as well of the New as of the Old Testament, He will assert
Himself upon the whole human race, therefore He is spoken of as two-edged.
For the sword arms the soldier, the sword slays the enemy, the sword punishes
the deserter. And that He might show to the apostles that He was announcing
judgment, He says: "I came not to send peace, but a sword."(2) And
after He had completed His parables, He says to them: "Have ye understood
all these things? And they said, We have. And He added, Therefore is every
scribe instructed in the kingdom of God like unto a man that is a father of
a family, bringing forth from his treasure things new and old,"(3)--the
new, the evangelical words of the apostles; the old, the precepts of the law
and the prophets: and He testified that these proceeded out of His mouth. Moreover,
He also says to Peter: "Go thou to the sea, and cast a hook, and take
up the fish that shall first come up; and having opened its mouth, thou shalt
find a stater (that is, two denarii), and thou shalt give it for me and for
thee."(4) And similarly David says by the Spirit: "God spake once,
twice I have heard the same."(5) Because God once decreed from the beginning
what shall be even to the end. Finally, as He Himself is the Judge appointed
by the Father. on account of His assumption of humanity, wishing to show that
men shall be judged by the word that He had declared, He says: "Think
ye that I will judge you at the last day? Nay, but the word," says He, "which
I have spoken unto you, that shall judge you in the last day."(6) And
Paul, speaking of Antichrist to the Thessalonians, says: "Whom the Lord
Jesus will slay by the breath of His mouth."(7) And Isaiah says: "By
the breath of His lips He shall slay the wicked."(8) This, therefore,
is the two-edged sword issuing out of His mouth.
15. "And His voice as it were the voice of many waters."] The many
waters are understood to be many peoples, or the gift of baptism that He sent
forth by the apostles, saying: "Go ye, teach all nations, baptizing them
in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost."(9)
16. "And He had in His right hand seven stars."] He said that in
His right hand He had seven stars, because the Holy Spirit of sevenfold agency
was given into His power by the Father. As Peter exclaimed to the Jews: "Being
at the right hand of God exalted, He hath shed forth this Spirit received from
the Father, which ye both see and hear."(10) Moreover, John the Baptist
had also anticipated this, by saying to his disciples: "For God giveth
not the Spirit by measure unto Him. The Father," says he, "loveth
the Son, and hath given all things into His hands."(11) Those seven stars
are the seven churches, which he names in his addresses by name, old calls
them to whom he wrote epistles. Not that they are themselves the only, or even
the principal churches; but what he says to one, he says to all. For they are
in no respect difent, that on that ground any one should prefer them to the
larger number of similar small ones. In the whole world Paul taught that all
the churches are arranged by sevens, that they are called seven, and that the
Catholic Church is one. And first of all, indeed, that he himself also might
maintain the type of seven churches, he did not exceed that number. But he
wrote to the Romans, to the Corinthians, to the Galatians, to the Ephesians,
to the Thessalonians, to the Philippians, to the Colossians; afterwards he
wrote to individual persons, so as not to exceed the number of seven churches.
And abridging in a short space his announcement, he thus says to Timothy: "That
thou mayest know how thou oughtest to behave thyself in the Church of the living
God."(12) We read also that this typical number is announced by the Holy
Spirit by the month of Isaiah: "Of seven women which took hold of one
man."(13) The one man is Christ, not born of seed; but the seven women
are seven churches, receiving His bread, and clothed with his apparel, who
ask that their reproach should be taken away, only that His name should be
called upon them. The bread is the Holy Spirit, which nourishes to eternal
life, promised to them, that is, by faith. And His garments wherewith they
desire to be clothed are the glory of immortality, of which Paul the apostle
says: "For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal
must put on mortality."(1) Moreover, they ask that their reproach may
be taken away--that is, that they may be cleansed from their sins: for the
reproach is the original sin which is taken away in baptism, and they begin
to be called Christian men, which is, "Let thy name be called upon us." Therefore
in these seven churches, of one Catholic Church are believers, because it is
one in seven by the quality of faith and election. Whether writing to them
who labour in the world, and live(2) of the frugality of their labours, and
are patient, and when they see certain men in the Church wasters, and pernicious,
they hear them, lest there should become dissension, he yet admonishes them
by love, that in what respects their faith is deficient they should repent;
or to those who dwell in cruel places among persecutors, that they should continue
faithful; or to those who, under the pretext of mercy, do unlawful sins in
the Church, and make them manifest to be done by others; or to those that are
at ease in the Church; or to those who are negligent, and Christians only in
name; or to those who are meekly instructed, that they may bravely persevere
in faith; or to those who study the Scriptures, and labour to know the mysteries
of their announcement, and are unwilling to do God's work that is mercy and
love: to all he urges penitence, to all he declares judgment.
FROM THE SECOND CHAPTER.
2. "I know thy works, and thy labour, and thy patience."]
In the first epistle He speaks thus: I know that thou sufferest and workest,
I see
that thou art patient; think not that I am staying long from thee.
"And that thou canst not bear them that are evil, and who say that they
are Jews and are not, and thou has found them liars, and thou hast patience
for My name's sake."] All these things tend to praise, and that no small
praise; and it behoves such men, and such a class, and such elected persons,
by all means to be admonished, that they may not be defrauded of such privileges
granted to them of God. These few things He said that He had against them.
4, 5. "And thou hast left thy first love: remember whence thou hast fallen."]
He who falls, falls from a height: therefore He said whence: because, even
to the very last, works of love must be practised; and this is the principal
commandment. Finally, unless this is done, He threatened to remove their candlestick
out of its place, that is, to disperse the congregation.
6. "This thou hast also, that thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitanes."]
But because thou thyself hatedst those who hold the doctrines of the Nicolaitanes,
thou expectest praise. Moreover, to hate the works of the Nicolaitanes, which
He Himself also hated, this tends to praise. But the works of the Nicolaitanes
were in that time false and troublesome men, who, as ministers under the name
of Nicolaus, had made for themselves a heresy, to the effect that what had
been offered to idols might be exorcised and eaten, and that whoever should
have committed fornication might receive peace on the eighth day. Therefore
He extols those to whom He is writing; and to these men, being such and so
great, He promised the tree of life, which is in the paradise of His God.
The following epistle unfolds the mode of life and habit of another order
which follows. He proceeds to say:--
9. "I know thy tribulation and thy poverty, but thou art rich."]
For He knows that with such men there are riches hidden with Him, and that
they deny the blasphemy of the Jews, who say that they are Jews and are not;
but they are the synagogue of Satan, since they are gathered together by Antichrist;
and to them He says:--
10. "Be thou faithful unto death."]
That they should continue to be faithful even unto death.
11. "He that shall overcome, shall not be hurt by the second death."]
That is, he shalt not be chastised in hell.
The third order of the saints shows that they are men who are strong in faith,
and who are not afraid of persecution; but because even among them there are
some who are inclined to unlawful associations, He says:--
14-16. "Thou hast there some who hold the doctrine of Balaam, who taught
in the case of Balak that he should put a stumbling-block before the children
of Israel, to eat and to commit fornication. So also hast thou them who hold
the doctrine of the Nicolaitanes; but I will fight with them with the sword
of my mouth."] That is, I will say what I shall command, and I will tell
you what you shall do. For Balaam,(3) with his doctrine, taught Balak to cast
a stumbling-block before the eyes of the children of Israel, to eat what was
sacrificed to idols, and to commit fornication,--a thing which is known to
have happened of old. For he gave this advice to the king of the Moabites,
and they caused stumbling to the people. Thus, says He, ye have among you those
who hold such doctrine; and under the pretext of mercy, you would corrupt others.
17. "To him that overcometh I will give the hidden manna, and I will
give him a white stone."] The hidden manna is immortality; the white gem
is adoption to be the son of God; the new name written on the stone is "Christian."
The fourth class intimates the nobility of the faithful, who labour daily,
and do greater works. But even among them also He shows that there are men
of an easy disposition to grant unlawful peace, and to listen to new forms
of prophesying; and He reproves and warns the others to whom this is not pleasing,
who know the wickedness opposed to them: for which evils He purposes to bring
upon the head of the faithful both sorrows and dangers; and therefore He says:--
24. "I will not put upon you any other burden."]
That is, I have not given you laws, observances, and duties, which is another
burden.
25, 26. "But that which ye have, hold fast until I come; and he that
overcometh, to him will I give power over all peoples."] That is, him
I will appoint as judge among the rest of the saints.
28. "And I will give him the morning star."]
To wit, the first resurrection. He promised the morning star, which drives
away the night, and announces the
light, that is, the beginning of day.
FROM THE THIRD CHAPTER.
The fifth class, company, or association of saints, sets forth men who are
careless, and who are carrying on in the world other transactions than those
which they ought--Christians only in name. And therefore He exhorts them that
by any means they should be turned away from negligence, and be saved; and
to this effect He says:--
2. "Be watchful, and strengthen the other things which were ready to
die; for I have not found thy works perfect before God."] For it is not
enough for a tree to live and to have no fruit, even as it is not enough to
be called a Christian and to confess Christ, but not to have Himself in our
work, that is, not to do His precepts.
The sixth class is the mode of life of the best election. The habit of saints
is set forth; of those, to wit, who are lowly in the world, and unskilled in
the Scriptures, and who hold the faith immoveably, and are not at all broken
down by any chance, or withdrawn from the faith by any fear. Therefore He says
to them:--
8. "I have set before thee an open door, because thou hast kept the word
of my patience."] In such little strength.
10. "And I will keep thee from the hour of temptation."]
That they may know His glory to be of this kind, that they are not indeed
permitted to
be given over to temptation.
12. "He that overcometh shall be made a pillar in the temple of God."]
For even as a pillar is an ornament of the building, so he who perseveres shall
obtain a nobility in the Church.
Moreover, the seventh association of the Church declares that they are rich
men placed in positions of dignity, but believing that they are rich, among
whom indeed the Scriptures are discussed in their bedchamber, while the faithful
are outside; and they are understood by none, although they boast themselves,
and say that they know all things,--endowed with the confidence of learning,
but ceasing from its labour. And thus He says:--
15. "That they are neither cold nor hot."]
That is, neither unbelieving nor believing, for they are all things to all
men. And because he who is neither
cold nor hot, but lukewarm, gives nausea, He says:--
16. "I will vomit thee out of My mouth."]
Although nausea is hateful, still it hurts no one; so also is it with men
of this kind when they have been
cast forth. But because there is time of repentance, He says:--
18. "I persuade thee to buy of Me gold tried in the fire."]
That is, that in whatever manner you can, you should suffer for the Lord's
name
tribulations and passions.
"And anoint thine eyes with eye-salve."]
That what you gladly know by the Scripture, you should strive also to do
the work of the same. And because,
if in these ways men return out of great destruction to great repentance, they
are not only useful to themselves, but they are able also to be of advantage
to many, He promised them no small reward,--to sit, namely, on the throne of
judgment.
FROM THE FOURTH CHAPTER.
"After this, I beheld, and, lo, a door was opened in heaven."]
The new testament is announced as an open door in heaven.
"And the first voice which I heard was, as it were, of a trumpet talking
with me, saying, Come up hither."] Since the door is shown to be opened,
it is manifest that previously it had been closed to men. And it was sufficiently
and fully laid open when Christ ascended with His body to the Father into heaven.
Moreover, the first voice which he had heard when he says that it spoke with
him, without contradiction condemns those who say that one spoke in the prophets,
another in the Gospel; since it is rather He Himself who comes, that is the
same who spoke in the prophets. For John was of the circumcision, and all that
people which had heard the announcement of the Old Testament was edified with
his word.
"That very same voice," said he, "that I had heard, that said
unto me, Come up hither."] That is the Spirit, whom a little before he
confesses that he had seen walking as the Son of man in the midst of the golden
candlesticks. And he now gathers from Him what had been foretold in similitudes
by the law, and associates with this scripture all the former prophets, and
opens up the Scriptures. And because our Lord invited in His own name all believers
into heaven, He forthwith poured out the Holy Spirit, who should bring them
to heaven. He says:--
2. "Immediately I was in the Spirit."]
And since the mind of the faithful is opened by the Holy Spirit, and that
is manifested to them which
was also foretold to the fathers, he distinctly says:--
"And, behold, a throne was set in heaven."]
The throne set: what is it but the throne of judgment and of the King?
3. "And He that sate upon the throne was, to look upon, like a jasper
and a sardine stone."] Upon the throne he says that he saw the likeness
of a jasper and a sardine stone. The jasper is of the colour of water, the
sardine of fire. These two are thence manifested to be placed as judgments
upon God's tribunal until the consummation of the world, of which judgments
one is already completed in the deluge of water, and the other shall be completed
by fire.
"And there was a rainbow about the throne."]
Moreover, the rainbow round about the throne has the same colours. The rainbow
is called a bow from
what the Lord spake to Noah and to his sons,(1) that they should not fear any
further deluge in the generation of God, but fire. For thus He says: I will
place my bow in the clouds, that ye may now no longer fear water, but fire.
6. "And before the throne there was, as it were, a sea of glass like
to crystal."] That is the gift of baptism which He sheds forth through
His Son in time of repentance, before He executes judgment. It is therefore
before the throne, that is, the judgment. And when he says a sea of glass like
to crystal, he shows that it is pure water, smooth, not agitated by the wind,
not flowing down as on a slope, but given to be immoveable as the house of
God.
"And round about the throne were four living creatures."]
The four living creatures are the four Gospels.
7-10. "The first living creature was like to a lion, and the second was
like to a calf, and the third had a face like to a man, and the fourth was
like to a flying eagle; and they had six wings, and round about and within
they were full of eyes; and they had no rest, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord
Omnipotent. And the four and twenty elders, failing down before the throne,
adored God."] The four and twenty elders are the twenty-four books of
the prophets and of the law, which give testimonies of the judgment. Moreover,
also, they are the twenty-four fathers--twelve apostles and twelve patriarchs.
And in that the living creatures are different in appearance, this is the reason:
the living creature like to a lion designates Mark, in whom is heard the voice
of the lion roaring in the desert. And in the figure of a man, Matthew strives
to declare to us the genealogy of Mary, from whom Christ took flesh. Therefore,
in enumerating from Abraham to David, and thence to Joseph, he spoke of Him
as if of a man: therefore his announcement sets forth the image of a man. Luke,
in narrating the priesthood of Zacharias as he offers a sacrifice for the people,
and the angel that appears to him with respect of the priesthood, and the victim
in the same description bore the likeness of a calf. John the evangelist, like
to an eagle hastening on uplifted wings to greater heights, argues about the
Word of God. Mark, therefore, as an evangelist thus beginning, "The beginning
of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, as it is written in Isaiah the prophet;"(2)
The voice of one crying in the wilderness,"(3)--has the effigy of a lion.
And Matthew, "The hook of the generation of Jesus Christ, the son of David,
the son of Abraham:"(4) this is the form of a man. But Luke said, "There
was a priest, by name Zachariah, of the course of Abia, and his wife was of
the daughters of Aaron:"(5) this is the likeness of a calf. But John,
when he begins, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God,"(6) sets forth the likeness of a flying eagle.
Moreover, not only do the evangelists express their four similitudes in their
respective openings of the Gospels, but also the Word itself of God the Father
Omnipotent, which is His Son our Lord Jesus Christ, bears the same likeness
in the time of His advent. When He preaches to us, He is, as it were, a lion
and a lion's whelp. And when for man's salvation He was made man to overcome
death, and to set all men free, and that He offered Himself a victim to the
Father on our behalf, He was called a calf. And that He overcame death and
ascended into the heavens, extending His wings and protecting His people, He
was named a flying eagle. Therefore these announcements, although they are
four, yet are one, because it proceeded from one mouth. Even as the river in
paradise, although it is one, was divided into four heads. Moreover, that for
the announcement of the New Testament those bring creatures had eyes within
and without, shows the spiritual providence which both looks into the secrets
of the heart, and beholds the things which are coming after that are within
and without.
8. "Six wings."] These are the testimonies of the books of the Old
Testament. Thus, twenty and four make as many as there are elders sitting upon
the thrones. But as an animal cannot fly unless it have wings, so, too, the
announcement of the New Testament gains no faith unless it have the fore-announced
testimonies of the Old Testament, by which it is lifted from the earth, and
flies. For in every case, what has been told before, and is afterwards found
to have happened, that begets an undoubting faith. Again, also, if wings be
not attached to the living creatures, they have nothing whence they may draw
their life. For unless what the prophets foretold had been consummated in Christ,
their preaching was vain. For the Catholic Church holds those things which
were both before predicted and afterwards accomplished. And it flies, because
the living animal is reasonably lifted up from the earth. But to heretics who
do not avail themselves of the prophetic testimony, to them also there are
present living creatures; but they do not fly, because they are of the earth.
And to the Jews who do not receive the announcement of the New Testament there
are present wings; but they do not fly, that is, they bring a vain prophesying
to men, not adjusting facts to their words. And the books of the Old Testament
that are received are twenty-four, which you will find in the epitomes of Theodore.
But, moreover (as we have said), four and twenty elders, patriarchs and apostles,
are to judge His people. For to the apostles, when they asked, saying, "We
have forsaken all that we had, and followed Thee: what shall we have?" our
Lord replied, "When the Son of man shall sit upon the throne of His glory,
ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel."(1)
But of the fathers also who should judge, says the patriarch Jacob, "Dan
also himself shall judge his people among his brethren, even as one of the
tribes in lsrael."(2)
5. "And from the throne proceeded lightnings, and voices, and thunders,
and seven torches of fire burning."] And the lightnings, and voices, and
thunders proceeding from the throne of God, and the seven torches of fire burning,
signify announcements, and promises of adoption, and threatenings. For lightnings
signify the Lord's advent, and the voices the announcements of the New Testament,
and the thunders, that the words are from heaven. The burning torches of fire
signify the gift of the Holy Spirit, that it is given by the wood of the passion.
And when these things were doing, he says that all the elders fell down and
adored the Lord; while the living creatures--that is, of course, the actions
recorded in the Gospels and the teaching of the Lord--gave Him glory and honour.(3)
In that they had fulfilled the word that had been previously foretold by them,
they worthily and with reason exult, feeling that they have ministered the
mysteries and the word of the Lord. Finally, also, because He had come who
should remove death, and who alone was worthy to take the crown of immortality,
all for the glory of His most excellent doing had crowns.
10. "And they cast their crowns under His feet."]
That is, on account of the eminent glory of Christ's victory, they cast all
their victories under
His feet. This is what in the Gospel the Holy Spirit consummated by showing,
For when about finally to suffer, our Lord had come to Jerusalem, and the people
had gone forth to meet Him, some strewed the road with palm branches cut down,
others threw down their garments, doubtless these were setting forth two peoples--the
one of the patriarchs, the other of the prophets; that is to say, of the great
men who had any kind of palms of their victories against sin, and cast them
under the feet of Christ, the victor of all. And the palm and the crown signify
the same things, and these are not given save to the victor.
FROM THE FIFTH CHAPTER.
1. "And I saw in the right hand of Him that sate upon the throne, a book
written within and without, sealed with seven seals."] This book signifies
the Old Testament, which has been given into the hands of our Lord Jesus Christ,
who received from the Father judgment.
2, 3. "And I saw an angel full of strength proclaiming with a loud voice,
Who is worthy to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof? And no one
was found worthy, neither in the earth nor under the earth, to open the book."]
Now to open the book is to overcome death for man.
4. "There was none found worthy to do this."]
Neither among the angels of heaven, nor among men in earth, nor among the
souls of the saints
in rest, save Christ the Son of God alone, whom he says that he saw as a Lamb
standing as it were slain, having seven horns. What had not been then announced,
and what the law had contemplated for Him by its various oblations and sacrifices,
it behoved Himself to fulfil. And because He Himself was the testator, who
had overcome death, it was just that Himself should be appointed the Lord's
heir, that He should possess the substance of the dying man, that is, the human
members.
5. "Lo, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the root of David, hath prevailed."]
We read in Genesis that this lion of the tribe of Judah hath conquered, when
the patriarch Jacob says, "Judah, thy brethren shall praise thee; thou
hast lain down and slept, and hast risen up again as a lion, and as a lion's
whelp."(1) For He is called a lion for the overcoming of death; but for
the suffering for men He was led as a lamb to the slaughter. But because He
overcame death, and anticipated the duty of the executioner, He was called
as it were slain. He therefore opens and seals again the testament, which He
Himself had sealed. The legislator Moses intimating this, that it behoved Him
to be sealed and concealed, even to the advent of His passion, veiled his face,
and so spoke to the people; showing that the words of his announcement were
veiled even to the advent of His time. For he himself, when he had read to
the people, having taken the wool purpled with the blood of the calf, with
water sprinkled the whole people, saying, "This is the blood of His testament
who hath purified you."(2) It should therefore be observed that the Man
is accurately announced, and that all things combine into one. For it is not
sufficient that that law is spoken of, but it is named as a testament. For
no law is called a testament, nor is any thing else called a testament, save
what persons make who are about to die. And whatever is within the testament
is sealed, even to the day of the testator's death. Therefore it is with reason
that it is only sealed by the Lamb slain, who, as it were a lion, has broken
death in pieces, and has fulfilled what had been foretold; and has delivered
man, that is, the flesh, from death, and has received as a possession the substance
of the dying person, that is, of the human members; that as by one body all
men had fallen under the obligation of its death, also by one body all believers
should be born again unto life, and rise again. Reasonably, therefore, His
face is opened and unveiled to Moses; and therefore He is called Apocalypse,
Revelation. For now His book is unsealed--now the offered victims are perceived--now
the fabrication of the priestly chrism; moreover the testimonies are openly
understood.
8, 9. "Twenty-four elders and four living creatures, having harps and
phials, and singing a new song."] The proclamation of the Old Testament
associated with the New, points out the Christian people singing a new song,
that is, bearing their confession publicly. It is a new thing that the Son
of God should become man. It is a new thing to ascend into the heavens with
a body. It is a new thing to give remission of sins to men. It is a new thing
for men to be sealed with the Holy Spirit. It is a new thing to receive the
priesthood of sacred observance, and to look for a kingdom of unbounded promise.
The harp, and the chord stretched on its wooden frame, signifies the flesh
of Christ linked with the wood of the passion. The phial signifies the Confession,(3)
and the race of the new Priesthood. But it is the praise of many angels, yea,
of all, the salvation of all, and the testimony of the universal creation,
bringing to our Lord thanksgiving for the deliverance of men from the destruction
of death. The unsealing of the seals, as we have said, is the opening of the
Old Testament, and the foretelling of the preachers of things to come in the
last times, which, although the prophetic Scripture speaks by single seals,
yet by all the seals opened at once, prophecy takes its rank.
FROM THE SIXTH CHAPTER.
1, 2. "And when the Lamb had opened one of the seven seals, I saw, and
heard one of the four living creatures saying, Come and see. And, lo, a white
horse, and He who sate upon him had a bow." ] The first seal being opened,
he says that he saw a white horse, and a crowned horseman having a bow. For
this was at first done by Himself. For after the Lord ascended into heaven
and opened all things, He sent the Holy Spirit, whose words the preachers sent
forth as arrows reaching to the human heart, that they might overcome unbelief.
And the crown on the head is promised to the preachers by the Holy Spirit.
The other three horses very plainly signify the wars, famines, and pestilences
announced by our Lord in the Gospel. And thus he says that one of the four
living creatures said (because all four are one), "Come and see." "Come" is
said to him that is invited to faith; "see" is said to him who saw
not. Therefore the white horse is the word of preaching with the Holy Spirit
sent into the world. For the Lord says, "This Gospel shall be preached
throughout the whole world for a testimony to all nations, and then shall come
the end."(1)
3, 4. "And when He had opened the second seal, I heard the second living
creature saying, Come and see. And there went out another horse that was red,
and to him that sate upon him was given a great sword."] The red horse,
and he that sate upon him, having a sword, signify the coming wars, as we read
in the Gospel: "For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against
kingdom; and there shall be great earthquakes in divers places."(2) This
is the ruddy horse.
5. "And when He had opened the third seal. I heard the third living creature
saying, Come and see. And, lo, a black horse; and he who sate upon it had a
balance in his hand."] The black horse signifies famine, for the Lord
says, "There shall be famines in divers places;" but the word is
specially extended to the times of Antichrist, when there shall be a great
famine, and when all shall be injured. Moreover, the balance in the hand is
the examining scales, wherein He might show forth the merits of every individual.
He then says:--
6. "Hurt not the wine and the oil."]
That is, strike not the spiritual man with thy inflictions. This is the black
horse.
7, 8. "And when He had opened the fourth seal, I heard the fourth living
creature saying, Come and see. And, lo, a pale horse; and he who sate upon
him was named Death."] For the pale horse and he who sate upon him bore
the name of Death. These same things also the Lord had promised among the rest
of the coming destructions--great pestilences and deaths; since, moreover,
he says:--
"And hell followed him."]
That is, it was waiting for the devouring of many unrighteous souls. This
is the pale horse.
9. "And when He had opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the
souls of them that were slain."] He relates that he saw under the altar
of God, that is, under the earth, the souls of them that were slain. For both
heaven and earth are called God's altar, as saith the law, commanding in the
symbolical form of the truth two altars to be made,--a golden one within, and
a brazen one without. But we perceive that the golden altar is thus called
heaven, by the testimony that our Lord bears to it; for He says, "When
thou bringest thy gift to the altar" (assuredly our gifts are the prayers
which we offer), "and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought against
thee, leave there thy gift before the altar."(3) Assuredly prayers ascend
to heaven. Therefore heaven is understood to be the golden altar which was
within; for the priests also were accustomed to enter once in the year--as
they who had the anointing--to the golden altar, the Holy Spirit signifying
that Christ should do this once for all. As the golden altar is acknowledged
to be heaven, so also by the brazen altar is understood the earth, under which
is the Hades,--a region withdrawn from punishments and fires, and a place of
repose for the saints, wherein indeed the righteous are seen and heard by the
wicked, but they cannot be carried across to them. He who sees all things would
have us to know that these saints, therefore-- that is, the souls of the slain--are
asking for vengeance for their blood, that is, of their body, from those that
dwell upon the earth; but because in the last time, moreover, the reward of
the saints will be perpetual, and the condemnation of the wicked shall come,
it was told them to wait. And for a solace to their body, there were given
unto each of them white robes. They received, says he, white robes, that is,
the gift of the Holy Spirit.
12. "And I saw, when he had opened the sixth seal, there was a great
earthquake."] In the sixth seal, then, was a great earthquake: this is
that very last persecution.
"And the sun became black as sackcloth of hair."]
The sun becomes as sackcloth; that is, the brightness of doctrine will be
obscured by unbelievers.
"And the entire moon became as blood."]
By the moon of blood is set forth the Church of the saints as pouring out
her blood for Christ.
13. "And the stars fell to the earth."]
The falling of the stars are the faithful who are troubled for Christ's sake.
"Even as a fig-tree casteth her untimely figs."]
The fig-tree, when shaken, loses its untimely figs--when men are separated
from the Church by
persecution.
14. "And the heaven withdrew as a scroll that is rolled up."]
For the heaven to be rolled away, that is, that the Church shall be taken
away.
"And every mountain and the islands were moved from their places."]
Mountains and islands removed from their places intimate that in the last persecution
all men departed from their places; that is, that the good will be removed,
seeking to avoid the persecution.
FROM THE SEVENTH CHAPTER.
2. "And I saw another angel ascending from the east, having the seal
of the living God" He speaks of Elias the prophet,who is the precursor
of the times of Antichrist, for the restoration and establishment of the churches
from the great and intolerable persecution. We read that these things are predicted
in the opening of the Old and New Testament; for He says by Malachi: "Lo,
I will send to you Elias the Tishbite, to turn the hearts of the fathers to
the children, according to the time of calling, to recall the Jews to the faith
of the people that succeed them."(1) And to that end He shows, as we have
said, that the number of those that shall believe, of the Jews and of the nations,
is a great multitude which no man was able to number. Moreover, we read in
the Gospel that the prayers of the Church are sent from heaven by an angel,
and that they are received against wrath, and that the kingdom of Antichrist
is cast out and extinguished by holy angels; for He says: "Pray that ye
enter not into temptation: for there shall be a great affliction, such as has
not been from the beginning of the world; and except the Lord had shortened
those days, no flesh should be saved."(2) Therefore He shall send these
seven great archangels to smite the kingdom of Antichrist; for He Himself also
thus said: "Then the Son of man shall send His messengers; and they shall
gather together His elect from the four corners of the wind, from the one end
of heaven even to the other end thereof."(3) For, moreover, He previously
says by the prophet: "Then shall there be peace for our land, when there
shall arise in it seven shepherds and eight attacks of men; and they shall
encircle Assur," that is, Antichrist, "in the trench of Nimrod,"(4)
that is, in the nation of the devil, by the spirit of the Church. Similarly
when the keepers of the house shall be moved. Moreover, the Lord Himself, in
the parable to the apostles, when the labourers had come to Him and said, "Lord,
did not we sow good seed in Thy field? whence, then, hath it tares? answered
them, An enemy hath done this. And they said to Him, Lord, wilt Thou, then,
that we go and root them up? And He said, Nay, but let both grow together until
the harvest; and in the time of the harvest I will say to the reapers, that
they gather the tares and make bundles of them, and burn them with fire everlasting,
but that they gather the wheat into my barns."(5) The Apocalypse here
shows, therefore, that these reapers, and shepherds, and labourers, are the
angels. And the trumpet is the word of power. And although the same thing recurs
in the phials, still it is not said as if it occurred twice, but because what
is decreed by the Lord to happen shall be once for all; for this cause it is
said twice. What, therefore, He said too little in the trumpets, is here found
in the phials. We must not regard the order of what is said, because frequently
the Holy Spirit, when He has traversed even to the end of the last times, returns
again to the same times, and fills up what He had before failed to say.(6)
Nor must we look for order in the Apocalypse; but we must follow the meaning
of those things which are prophesied. Therefore in the trumpets and phials
is signified either the desolation of the plagues that are sent upon the earth,
or the madness of Antichrist himself, or the cutting off of the peoples, or
the diversity of the plagues, or the hope in the kingdom of the saints, or
the ruin of states, or the great overthrow of Babylon, that is, the Roman state.
9. "After this I beheld, and, lo, a great multitude, which no man was
able to number, of every nation, tribe, and people, and tongue, clothed with
white robes."] What the great multitude out of every tribe implies, is
to show the number of the elect out of all believers, who, being cleansed by
baptism in the blood of the Lamb, have made their robes white, keeping the
grace which they have received.
FROM THE EIGHTH CHAPTER.
1. "And when He had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven
for about half an hour."] Whereby is signified the beginning of everlasting
rest; but it is described as partial, because the silence being interrupted,
he repeats it in order. For if the silence had continued, here would be an
end of his narrative.
13 "And I saw an angel flying through the midst of heaven."]
By the angel flying through the midst of heaven is signified the Holy Spirit
beating
witness in two of the prophets that a great wrath of plagues was imminent.
If by any means, even in the last times, any one should be willing to be converted,
any one might even still be saved.
FROM THE NINTH CHAPTER.
13, 14. "And I heard a voice from the four horns of the golden altar
which is in the presence of God, saying to the sixth angel which had the trumpet,
Loose the four angels."] That is, the four corners of the earth which
hold the four winds.
"Which are bound in the great river Euphrates."] By the corners
of the earth, or the four winds across the river Euphrates, are meant four
nations, because to every nation is sent an angel; as said the law, "He
determined them by the number of the angels of God,"(7) until the number
of the saints should be filled up. They do not overpass their bounds, because
at the last they shall come with Antichrist.
FROM THE TENTH CHAPTER.
1, 2. "I saw another mighty angel coming down from heaven, clothed with
a cloud; and a rainbow was upon his head, and his face was as it were the sun,
and his feet as pillars of fire: and he had in his hand an open book: and he
set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot upon the earth."] He
signifies that that mighty ngel who, he says, descended from heaven, clothed
with a cloud, is our Lord, as we have above narrated.
"His face was as it were the sun."]
That is, with respect to the resurrection.
"Upon his head was a rainbow."]
He points to the judgment which is executed by Him, of shall be.
"An open book."]
A revelation of works in the future judgment, or the Apocalypse which John
received.
"His feet,"]
as we have said above, are the apostles. For that both things in sea and
land are trodden
under foot by Him, signifies that all things
are placed under His feet. Moreover, he calls Him an angel, that is, a messenger,
to wit, of the Father; for He is called the Messenger of great counsel. He
says also that He cried with a loud voice. The great voice is to tell the words
of the Omnipotent God of heaven to men, and to bear witness that after penitence
is closed there will be no hope subsequently.
3. "Seven thunders uttered their voices."] The seven thunders uttering
their voices signify, the Holy Spirit of sevenfold power, who through the prophets
announced all things to come, and by His voice John gave his testimony in the
world; but because he says that he was about to write the things which the
thunders had uttered, that is, whatever things had been obscure in the announcements
of the Old Testament; he is forbidden to write them, but he was charged to
leave them sealed, because he is an apostle, nor was it fitting that the grace
of the subsequent stage should be given in the first. "The time," says
he, "is at hand."(1) For the apostles, by powers, by signs, by portents,
and by mighty works, have overcome unbelief. After them there is now given
to the same completed Churches the comfort of having the prophetic Scriptures
subsequently interpreted, for I said that after the apostles there would be
interpreting prophets.
For the
apostle says: "And he placed in the Church indeed, first, apostles;
secondly, prophets; thirdly, teachers,"(2) and the rest. And in another
place he says: "Let the prophets speak two or three, and let the others
judge."(3) And he says: "Every woman that prayeth or prophesieth
with her head uncovered, dishonoureth her head"(4) And when he says, "Let
the prophets speak two or three, and let the others judge," he is not
speaking in respect of the Catholic prophecy of things unheard and unknown,
but of things both announced and known. But let them judge whether or not the
interpretation is consistent with the testimonies of the prophetic utterance.(5)
It is plain, therefore, that to John, armed as he was with superior virtue,
this was not necessary, although the body of Christ, which is the Church, adorned
with His members, ought to respond to its position.
10. "I took the book from the hand of the angel, and ate it up."]
To take the book and eat it up, is, when exhibition of a thing is made to one,
to commit it to memory.
"And it was in my mouth as sweet as honey."]
To be sweet in the mouth is the reward of the preaching of the speaker, and
is most pleasant to
the hearers; but it is most bitter both to those that announce it, and to those
that persevere in its commandments through suffering.
11. "And He says unto me, Thou must again prophesy to the peoples, and
to the tongues, and to the nations, and to many kings."] He says this,
because when John said these things he was in the island of Patmos, condemned
to the labour of the mines by Caesar Domitian. There, therefore, he saw the
Apocalypse; and when grown old, he thought that he should at length receive
his quittance by suffering, Domitian being killed, all his judgments were discharged.
And John being dismissed from the mines, thus subsequently delivered the same
Apocalypse which he had received from God. This, therefore, is what He says:
Thou must again prophesy to all nations, because thou seest the crowds of Antichrist
rise up; and against them other crowds shall stand, and they shall fall by
the sword on the one side and on the other.
FROM THE ELEVENTH CHAPTER.
1. "And there was shown unto me a reed like unto a rod: and the angel
stood, saying, Rise, and measure the temple of God, and the altar, and them
that worship therein."] A reed was shown like to a rod. This itself is
the Apocalypse which he subsequently exhibited to the churches; for the Gospel
of the complete faith he subsequently wrote for the sake of our salvation.
For when Valentinus, and Cerinthus, and Ebion, and others of the school of
Satan, were scattered abroad throughout the world, there assembled together
to him from the neighbouring provinces all the bishops, and compelled him himself
also to draw up his testimony. Moreover, we say that the measure of God's temple
is the command of God to confess the Father Almighty, and that His Son Christ
was begotten by the Father before the beginning of the world, and was made
man in very soul and flesh, both of them having overcome misery and death;
and that, when received with His body into heaven by the Father, He shed forth
the Holy Spirit, the gift and pledge of immortality, that He was announced
by the prophets, He was described by the law, He was God's hand, and the Word
of the Father from God, Lord over all, and founder of the world: this is the
reed and the measure of faith; and no one worships the holy altar save he who
confesses this faith.
2. "The court which is within the temple leave out."]
The space which is called the court is the empty altar within the walls:
these being
such as were not necessary, he commanded to be ejected from the Church.
"It is given to be trodden down by the Gentiles."]
That is, to the men of this world, that it may be trodden under foot by the
nations, or with
the nations. Then he repeats about the destruction and slaughter of the last
time, and says:--
3. "They shall tread the holy city down for forty and two months; and
I will give to my two witnesses, and they shall predict a thousand two hundred
and threescore days clothed in sackcloth."] That is, three years and six
months: these make forty-two months. Therefore their preaching is three years
and six months, and the kingdom of Antichrist as much again.
5. "If any man will hurt them, fire proceedeth out of their mouth, and
devoureth their enemies."] That fire proceedeth out of the mouth of those
prophets against the adversaries, bespeaks the power of the world. For all
afflictions, however many there are, shall be sent by their messengers in their
word. Many think that there is Elisha, or Moses, with Elijah; but both of these
died; while the death of Elijah is not heard of, with whom all our ancients
have believed that it was Jeremiah. For even the very word spoken to him testifies
to him, saying, "Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee; and before
thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a
prophet unto the nations."(1) But he was not a prophet unto the nations;
and thus the truthful word of God makes it necessary, which it has promised
to set forth, that he should be a prophet to the nations.
4. "These are the two candlesticks standing before the Lord of the earth."]
These two candlesticks and two olive trees He has to this end spoken of, and
admonished you that if, when you have read of them elsewhere, you have not
understood, you may understand here. For in Zechariah, one of the twelve prophets,
it is thus written: "These are the two olive trees and two candlesticks
which stand in the presence of the Lord of the earth;"(2) that is, they
are in paradise. Also, in another sense, standing in the presence of the lord
of the earth, that is, in the presence of Antichrist. Therefore they must be
slain by Antichrist.
7. "And the beast which ascendeth from the abyss."] After many plagues
completed in the world, in the end he says that a beast ascended from the abyss.
Bat that he shall ascend from the abyss is proved by many testimonies; for
he says in the thirty-first chapter of Ezekiel: "Behold, Assur was a cypress
in Mount Lebanon." Assur, deeply rooted, was a lofty and branching cypress--that
is, a numerous people--in Mount Lebanon, in the kingdom of kingdoms, that is,
of the Romans. Moreover, that he says he was beautiful in offshoots, he says
he was strong in armies. The water, he says, shall nourish him, that is, the
many thousands of men which were subjected to him; and the abyss increased
him, that is, belched him forth. For even Isaiah speaks almost in the same
words; moreover, that he was in the kingdom of the Romans, and that he was
among the Caesars. The Apostle Paul also bears witness, for he says to the
Thessalonians: "Let him who now restraineth restrain, until he be taken
out of the way; and then shall appear that Wicked One, even he whose coining
is after the working of Satan, with signs and lying wonders."(3) And that
they might know that he should come who then was the prince, he added: "He
already endeavours after the secret of mischief"(4)--that is, the mischief
which he is about to do he strives to do secretly; but he is not raised up
by his own power, nor by that of his father, but by command of God, of which
thing Paul says in the same passage: "For this cause, because they have
not received the love of God, He will send upon them a spirit of error, that
they all may be persuaded of a lie, who have not been persuaded of the truth."(5)
And Isaiah saith: "While they waited for the light, darkness arose upon
them."(6) Therefore the Apocalypse sets forth that these prophets are
killed by the same, and on the fourth day rise again, that none might be found
equal to God.
8. "And their dead bodies shall lie in the streets of the great city,
which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt."] But He calls Jerusalem
Sodom and Egypt, since it had become the heaping up of the persecuting people.
Therefore it behoves us diligently, and with the utmost care, to follow the
prophetic announcement, and to understand what the Spirit from the Father both
announces and anticipates, and how, when He has gone forward to the last times,
He again repeats the former ones. And now, what He will do once for all, He
sometimes sets forth as if it were done; and unless you understand this, as
sometimes done, and sometimes as about to be done, you will fall into a great
confusion. Therefore the interpretation of the following sayings has shown
therein, that not the order of the reading, but the order of the discourse,
must be understood.
19. "And the temple of God was opened which is in heaven."] The
temple opened is a manifestation of our Lord. For the temple of God is the
Son, as He Himself says: "Destroy this temple, and in three days I will
raise it up." And when the Jews said, "Forty and six years was this
temple in building," the evangelist says, "He spake of the temple
of His body."
"And there was seen in His temple the ark of the Lord's testament."]
The preaching of the Gospel and the forgiveness of sins, and all the gifts
whatever that came with Him, he says, appeared therein.
FROM THE TWELFTH CHAPTER.
1. "And there was seen a great sign in heaven. A woman clothed with the
sun, and the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars.
And being with child, she cried out travailing, and bearing torments that she
might bring forth."] The woman clothed with the sun, and having the moon
under her feet, and wearing a crown of twelve stars upon her head, and travailing
in her pains, is the ancient Church of fathers, and prophets, and saints, and
apostles,(2) which had the groans and torments of its longing until it saw
that Christ, the fruit of its people according to the flesh long promised to
it, had taken flesh out of the selfsame people. Moreover, being clothed with
the sun intimates the hope of resurrection and the glory of the promise. And
the moon intimates the fall of the bodies of the saints under the obligation
of death, which never can fail. For even as life is diminished, so also it
is increased. Nor is the hope of those that sleep extinguished absolutely,
as some think, but they have in their darkness a light such as the moon. And
the crown of twelve stars signifies the choir of fathers, according to the
fleshly birth, of whom Christ was to take flesh.
3. "And there appeared another sign in heaven; and behold a red dragon,
having seven heads."] Now, that he says that this dragon was of a red
colour--that is, of a purple colour--the result of his work gave him such a
colour. For from the beginning (as the Lord says) he was a murderer; and he
has oppressed the whole of the human race, not so much by the obligation of
death, as, moreover, by the various forms of destruction and fatal mischiefs.
His seven heads were the seven kings of the Romans, of whom also is Antichrist,
as we have said above.
"And ten horns."]
He says that the ten kings in the latest times are the same as these, as
we
shall more fully set forth there.
4. "And his tail drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and cast
them upon the earth."] Now, that he says that the dragon's tail drew the
third part of the stars of heaven, this may be taken in two ways. For many
think that he may be able to seduce the third part of the men who believe.(3)
But it should more truly be understood, that of the angels that were subject
to him, since he was still a prince when he descended from his estate, he seduced
the third part; therefore what we said above, the Apocalypse says.
"And the dragon stood before the woman who was beginning to bring forth,
that, when she had brought forth, he might devour her child."] The red
dragon standing and desiring to devour her child when she had brought him forth,
is the devil,--to wit, the traitor angel, who thought that the perishing of
all men would be alike by death; but He, who was not born of seed, owed nothing
to death: wherefore he could not devour Him--that is, detain Him in death--for
on the third day He rose again. Finally, also, and before He suffered, he approached
to tempt Him as man; but when he found that He was not what he thought Him
to be, he departed from Him, even till the time. Whence it is here said:--
5. "And she brought forth a son, who begins to rule all nations with
a rod of iron."] The rod of iron is the sword of persecution.
"I saw that all men withdrew from his abodes."]
That is, the good will be removed, flying from persecution.(4)
"And her son was caught up to God, and to His throne."]
We read also in the Acts of the Apostles that He was caught up to God's throne,
just
as speaking with the disciples He was caught up to heaven.
6. "But the woman fled into the wilderness, and there were given to her
two great eagle's wings."] The aid of the great eagle's wings--to wit,
the gift of prophets--was given to that Catholic Church, whence in the last
times a hundred and forty-four thousands of men should believe on the preaching
of Elias; but, moreover, he here says that the rest of the people should be
found alive on the coming of the Lord. And the Lord says in the Gospel: "Then
let them which are in Judea flee to the mountains;"(1) that is, as many
as should be gathered together in Judea, let them go to that place which they
have ready, and let them be supported there for three years and six months
from the presence of the devil.
14. "Two great wings"]
are the two prophets--Elias, and the prophet who shall be with him.
15. "And the serpent cast out of his mouth after the woman water as a
flood, that he might carry her away with the flood."] He signifies by
the water which the serpent cast out of his mouth, the people who at his command
would persecute her.
16. "And the earth helped the woman, and opened her mouth, and swallowed
up the flood which the dragon cast out of his mouth."] That the earth
opened her month and swallowed up the waters, sets forth the vengeance for
the present troubles. Although, therefore, it may signify this woman bringing
forth, it shows her afterwards flying when her offspring is brought forth,
because both things did not happen at one time; for we know that Christ was
born, but that the time should arrive that she should flee from the face of
the serpent: (we do not know) that this has happened as yet. Then he says:--
7-9. "There was a battle in heaven: Michael and his angels fought with
the dragon; and the dragon warred, and his angels, and they prevailed not;
nor was their place found any more in heaven. And that great dragon was cast
forth, that old serpent: he was cast forth into the earth."] This is the
beginning of Antichrist yet previously Elias must prophesy, and there must
be times of peace. And afterwards, when the three years and six months are
completed in the preaching of Elias, he also must be cast down from heaven,
where up till that time he had had the power of ascending; and all the apostate
angels, as well as Antichrist, must be roused up from hell. Paul the apostle
says: "Except there come a falling away first, and the man of sin shall
appear, the son of perdition; and the adversary who exalted himself above all
which is called God, or which is worshipped."(2)
FROM THE THIRTEENTH CHAPTER.(3)
1. "And I saw a beast rising up from the sea, like unto a leopard."]
This signifies the kingdom of that time of Antichrist, and the people mingled
with the variety of nations.
2. "His feet were as the feet of a bear."]
A strong and most unclean beast, the feet are to be understood as his leaders.
"And his mouth as the mouth of a lion."]
That is, his mouth armed for blood is his bidding, and a tongue which will
proceed to nothing else than
to the shedding of blood.
* * * * * * * *
18. "His number is the name of a man, and his number is Six hundred threescore
and six."] As they have it reckoned from the Greek characters, they thus
find it among many to be <greek>teitan</greek>, for <greek>teitan</greek> has
this number, which the Gentiles call Sol and Phoebus; and it is reckoned in
Greek thus: <greek>t</greek> three hundred, <greek>e</greek> five, <greek>i</greek> ten, <greek>t</greek> three
hundred, <greek>a</greek> one, <greek>t</greek> fifty,--which
taken together become six hundred and sixty-six. For as far as belongs to the
Greek letters, they fill up this number and name; which name if you wish to
turn into Latin, it is understood by the antiphrase DICLUX, which letters are
reckoned in this manner: since D figures five hundred, I one, C a hundred,
L fifty, V five, X ten,--which by the reckoning up of the letters makes similarly
six hundred and sixty-six, that is, what in Greek gives <greek>teitan</greek>,
to wit, what in Latin is called DICLUX; by which name, expressed by anti-phrases,
we understand Antichrist, who, although he be cut off from the supernal light,
and deprived thereof, yet transforms himself into an angel of light, daring
to call himself light.(4) Moreover, we find in a certain Greek codex <greek>antemos</greek>,
which letters being reckoned up, you will find to give the number as above: <greek>a</greek> one, <greek>n</greek> fifty, <greek>t</greek> three
hundred, <greek>e</greek> five, <greek>m</greek> forty, <greek>o</greek> seventy, <greek>s</greek> two
hundred,--which together makes six hundred and sixty-six, according to the
Greeks. Moreover, there is another name in Gothic of him, which will be evident
of itself, that is, <greek>genshrikos</greek>, which in the same
way you will reckon in Greek letters: <greek>g</greek> three, <greek>e</greek> five, <greek>n</greek> fifty, <greek>s</greek> two
hundred, <greek>h</greek> eight, <greek>r</greek> a
hundred, <greek>i</greek> ten, <greek>k</greek> twenty,
seventy, <greek>s</greek> also two hundred, which, as has been
said above, make six hundred and sixty-six.
11. "And I saw another beast coming up out of the earth."]
He is speaking of the great and false prophet who is to do signs, and portents,
and
falsehoods before him in the presence of men.
"And he had two horns like a lamb--that is, the appearance within of
a man--and he spoke like a dragon."] But the devil speaks full of malice;
for he shall do these things in the presence of men, so that even the dead
appear to rise again.
13. "And he shall make fire come down from heaven in the sight of men."]
Yes (as I also have said), in the sight of men. Magicians do these things,
by the aid of the apostate angels, even to this day. He shall cause also that
a golden image of Antichrist shall be placed in the temple at Jerusalem, and
that the apostate angel should enter, and thence utter voices and oracles.
Moreover, he himself shall contrive that his servants and children should receive
as a mark on their foreheads, or on their right hands, the number of his name,
lest any one should buy or sell them. Daniel had previously predicted his contempt
and provocation of God. "And he shall place," says he, "his
temple within Samaria, upon the illustrious and holy mountain that is at Jerusalem,
an image such as Nebuchadnezzar had made."(1) Thence here he places, and
by and by here he renews, that of which the Lord, admonishing His churches
concerning the last times and their dangers, says: "But when ye shall
see the contempt which is spoken of by Daniel the prophet standing in the holy
place, let him who readeth understand."(2) It is called a contempt when
God is provoked, because idols are worshipped instead of God, or when the dogma
of heretics is introduced in the churches. But it is a turning away because
stedfast men, seduced by false signs and portents, are turned away from their
salvation.
FROM THE FOURTEENTH CHAPTER.
6. "And I saw an angel flying through the midst of heaven."]
The angel flying through the midst of heaven, whom he says that he saw, we
have
already treated of above, as being the same Elias who anticipates the kingdom
of Anti-christ in his prophecy.
8. "And another angel following him."]
The other angel following, he speaks of as the same prophet who is the associate
of his prophesying. But
that he says,--
15. "Thrust in thy sharp sickle, and gather in the grapes of the vine,"]
he signifies it of the nations that should perish on the advent of the Lord.
And indeed in many forms he shows this same thing, as if to the dry harvest,
and the seed for the coming of the Lord, and the consummation of the world,
and the kingdom of Christ, and the future appearance of the kingdom of the
blessed.
19, 20. "And the angel thrust in the sickle, and reaped the vine of the
earth, and cast it into the wine-press of the wrath of God. And the wine-press
of His fury was trodden down without the city."] In that he says that
it was cast into the wine-press of the wrath of God, and trodden down without
the city, the treading of the wine-press is the retribution on the sinner.
"And blood went out from the wine-press, even unto the horse-bridles."]
The vengeance of shed blood as was before predicted, "In blood thou hast
sinned, and blood shall follow thee."(3)
"For a thousand and six hundred furlongs."]
That is, through all the four parts of the world: for there is a quadrate
put together by fours,
as in four faces and four appearances, and wheels by fours; for forty times
four is one thousand six hundred. Repeating the same persecution, the Apocalypse
says:--
FROM THE FIFTEENTH CHAPTER.
1. "And I saw another great and wonderful sign, seven angels having the
seven last plagues; for in them is completed the indignation of God."]
For the wrath of God always strikes the obstinate people with seven plagues,
that is, perfectly, as it is said in Leviticus; and these shall be in the last
time, when the Church shall have gone out of the midst.
2. "Standing upon the sea of glass, having harps."]
That is, that they stood stedfastly in the faith upon their baptism, and
having their confession
in their mouth, that they shall exult in the kingdom before God. But let us
return to what is set before us.
FROM THE SEVENTEENTH CHAPTER.
1-6. "There came one of the seven angels, which have the seven bowls,
and spake with me, saying, Come, I will show thee the judgment of that great
whore who sitteth upon many waters. And I saw the woman drunk with the blood
of the saints, and with the blood of the martyrs."] The decrees of that
senate are always accomplished against all, contrary to the preaching of the
true faith; and now already mercy being cast aside, itself here gave the decree
among all nations.
3. "And I saw the woman herself sitting upon the scarlet-coloured beast,
full of names of blasphemy."] But to sit upon the scarlet beast, the author
of murders, is the image of the devil. Where also is treated of his captivity,
concerning which we have fully considered. I remember, indeed, that this is
called Babylon also in the Apocalypse, on account of confusion; and in Isaiah
also; and Ezekiel called it Sodom. In fine, if you compare what is said against
Sodom, and what Isaiah says against Babylon, and what the Apocalypse says,
you will find that they are all one.(4)
9. "The seven heads are the seven hills, on which the woman sitteth."]
That is, the city of Rome.
10. "And there are seven kings: five have fallen, and one is, and the
other is not yet come; and when he is come, he will be for a short time."]
The time must be understood in which the written Apocalypse was published,
since then reigned Caesar Domitian; but before him had been Titus his brother,
and Vespasian, Otho, Vitellius, and Galba. These are the five who have fallen.
One remains, under whom the Apocalypse was written--Domitian, to wit. "The
other has not yet come," speaks of Nerva; "and when he is come, he
will be for a short time," for he did not complete the period of two years.
11. "And the beast which thou sawest is of the seven."]
Since before those kings Nero reigned.
"And he is the eighth."] He says only when this beast shall come,
reckon it the eighth place, since in that is the completion. He added:-- "And
shall go into perdition."(3) For that ten kings received royal power when
he shall move from the east, he says. He shall be sent from the city of Rome
with his armies. And Daniel sets forth the ten horns and the ten diadems. And
that these are eradicated from the former ones,--that is, that three of the
principal leaders are killed by Antichrist: that the other seven give him honour
and wisdom and power, of whom he says:--
16. "These shall hate the whore, to wit, the city, and shall burn her
flesh with fire."] Now that one of the heads was, as it were, slain to
death, and that the stroke of his death was directed, he speaks of Nero. For
it is plain that when the cavalry sent by the senate was pursuing him, he himself
cut his throat. Him therefore, when raised up, God will send as a worthy king,
but worthy in such a way as the Jews merited. And since he is to have another
name, He shall also appoint another name, that so the Jews may receive him
as if he were the Christ. Says Daniel: "He shall not know the lust of
women, although before he was most impure, and he shall know no God of his
fathers: for he will not be able to seduce the people of the circumcision,
unless he is a judge of the law."(1) Finally, also, he will recall the
saints, not to the worship of idols, but to undertake circumcision, and, if
he is able, to seduce any; for he shall so conduct himself as to be called
Christ by them. But that he rises again from hell, we have said above in the
word of Isaiah: "Water shall nourish him, and hell hath increased him;" who,
however, must come with name unchanged, and doings unchanged, as says the Spirit.
FROM THE NINETEENTH CHAPTER.
11. "And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he that sate
upon him was called Faithful and True."] The horse, and He that sits upon
him, sets forth our Lord coming to His kingdom with the heavenly army. Because
from the sea of the north, which is the Arabian Sea, even to the sea of Phoenice,
and even to the ends of the earth, they will command these greater parts in
the coming of the Lord Jesus, and all the souls of the nations will be assembled
to judgment.
FROM THE TWENTIETH CHAPTER.
1-3. "And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key of the
abyss, and a chain in his hand. And he held the dragon, that old serpent, which
is called the Devil and Satan, and bound him for a thousand years, and cast
him into the abyss, and shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should
deceive the nations no more, till the thousand years should be finished: after
this he must be loosed a little season."] Those years wherein Satan is
bound are in the first advent of Christ, even to the end of the age; and they
are called a thousand, according to that mode of speaking, wherein a part is
signified by the whole, just as is that passage, "the word which He commanded
for a thousand generations,"(2) although they are not a thousand. Moreover
that he says, "and he cast him into the abyss," he says this, because
the devil, excluded from the hearts of believers, began to take possession
of the wicked, in whose hearts, blinded day by day, he is shut up as if in
a profound abyss. And he shut him up, says he, and put a seal upon him, that
he should not deceive the nations until the thousand years should be finished. "He
shut the door upon him," it is said, that is, he forbade and restrained
his seducing those who belong to Christ. Moreover, he put a seal upon him,
because it is hidden who belong to the side of the devil, and who to that of
Christ. For we know not of those who seem to stand whether they shall not fall,
and of those who are down it is uncertain whether they may rise. Moreover,
that he says that he is bound and shut up, that he may not seduce the nations,
the nations signify the Church, seeing that of them it itself is formed, and
which being seduced, he previously held until, he says, the thousand years
should be completed, that is, what is left of the sixth day, to wit, of the
sixth age, which subsists for a thousand years; after this he must be loosed
for a little season. The little season signifies three years and six months,
in which with all his power the devil will avenge himself trader Anti-christ
against the Church. Finally, he says, after that the devil shall be loosed,
and will seduce the nations in the whole world, and will entice war against
the Church, the number of whose foes shall be as the sand of the sea.(1)
4, 5. "And I saw thrones, and them that sate upon them, and judgment
was given unto them; and I saw the souls of them that were slain on account
of the testimony of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not worshipped
the beast nor his image, nor have received his writing on their forehead or
in their hand; and they reigned with Christ for a thousand years: the rest
of them lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the
first resurrection."] There are two resurrections. But the first resurrection
is now of the souls that are by the faith, which does not permit men to pass
over to the second death. Of this resurrection the apostle says: "If ye
have risen with Christ, seek those things which are above."(2)
6. "Blessed and holy is he who has part in this resurrection: on them
the second death shall have no power, but they shall be priests of God and
Christ, and they shall reign with Him a thousand years."] I do not think
the reign of a thousand years is eternal; or if it is thus to be thought of,
they cease to reign when the thousand years are finished. But I will put forward
what my capacity enables me to judge. The tenfold number signifies the decalogue,
and the hundredfold sets forth the crown of virginity: for he who shall have
kept the undertaking of virginity completely, and shall have faithfully fulfilled
the precepts of the decalogue, and shall have destroyed the untrained nature
or impure thoughts within the retirement of the heart, that they may not rule
over him, this is the true priest of Christ, and accomplishing the millenary
number thoroughly, is thought to reign with Christ; and truly in his case the
devil is bound. But he who is entangled in the vices and the dogmas of heretics,
in his case the devil is loosed. But that it says that when the thousand years
are finished he is loosed, so the number of the perfect saints being completed,
in whom there is the glory of virginity in body and mind, by the approaching
advent of the kingdom of the hateful one, many, seduced by that love of earthly
things, shall be overthrown, and together with him shall enter the lake of
fire.
8-10. "And they went up upon the breadth of the earth, and compassed
the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city; and fire came down from
God out of heaven, and devoured them. And the devil who seduced them was cast
into the take of fire and brimstone, where both the beast and the false prophet
shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever."] This belongs to
the last judgment. And after a little time the earth was made holy, as being
at least that wherein lately had reposed the bodies of the virgins, when they
shall enter upon an eternal kingdom with an immortal King, as they who are
not only virgins in body, but, moreover, with equal inviolability have protected
themselves, both in tongue and thought, from wickedness; and these, it shows,
shall dwell in rejoicing for ever with the Lamb.
FROM THE TWENTY-FIRST AND TWENTY-SECOND CHAPTERS.
16. "And the city is placed in a square."]
The city which he says is squared, he says also is resplendent with gold
and precious stones, and
has a sacred street, and a river through the midst of it, and the tree of life
on either side, bearing twelve manner of fruits throughout the twelve months;
and that the light of the sun is not there, because the Lamb is the light of
it; and that its gates were of single pearls; and that there were three gates
on each of the four sides, and that they could not be shut. I say, in respect
of the square city, he shows forth the united multitude of the saints, in whom
the faith could by no means waver. As Noah is commanded to make the ark of
squared beams,(3) that it might resist the force of the deluge, by the precious
stones he sets forth the holy men who cannot waver in persecution, who could
not be moved either by the tempest of persecutors, or be dissolved from the
true faith by the force of the rain, because they are associated of pure gold,
of whom the city of the great King is adorned. Moreover, the streets set forth
their hearts purified from all uncleanness, transparent with glowing light,
that the Lord may justly walk up and down in them. The river of life sets forth
that the grace of spiritual doctrine flowed through the minds of the faithful,
and that manifold flourishing forms of odours germinated therein. The tree
of life on either bank sets forth the Advent of Christ, according to the flesh,
who satisfied the peoples wasted with famine, that received life from One by
the wood of the Cross, with the announcement of God's word. And in that he
says that the sun is not necessary in the city, he shows, evidently, that the
Creator as the immaculate light shines in the midst of it, whose brightness
no mind has been able to conceive, nor tongue to tell.
In that he says there are three gates placed on each of the four sides, of
single pearls, I think that these are the four virtues,(4) to wit, prudence,
fortitude, justice, temperance, which are associated with one another. And,
being involved together, they make the number twelve. But the twelve gates
we believe to be the number of the apostles, who, shining in the four virtues
as precious stones, manifesting the light of their doctrine among the saints,
cause it to enter the celestial city, that by intercourse with them the choir
of angels may be gladdened. And that the gates cannot be shut, it is evidently
shown that the doctrine of the apostles can be separated from rectitude by
no tempest of contradiction. Even though the floods of the nations and the
vain superstitions of heretics should revolt against their true faith, they
are overcome, and shall be dissolved as the foam, because Christ is the Rock(1)
by which, and on which, the Church is founded.(2) And thus it is overcome by
no traces of maddened men. Therefore they are not to be heard who assure themselves
that there is to be an earthly reign of a thousand years; who think, that is
to say, with the heretic Cerinthus.(3) For the kingdom of Christ is now eternal
in the saints, although the glory of the saints shall be manifested after the
resurrection.
Back to Volume 7 Index