REVELATION CHAPTER
8.
VIEW FOOTNOTES
The
Third Vision and the Opening of the Seventh Seal.
Rev.
8, 1-13.
The preparation for the sounding of the trumpets:
V.1. And when he had opened the seventh seal, there
was
silence in heaven about the space of half an hour. V.2. And I
saw the
seven, angels which stood before God; and to them were given seven
trumpets. v.3.
And
another angel came and stood at the altar having a golden censer; and
there was
given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of
all
saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne. V.4.
And
the smoke of the incense which came with the prayers of the saints
ascended up
before God out of the angel’s hand. V.5. And
the angel took the censer, and filled it with fire of the altar, and
cast it
into the earth; and there were voices and thunderings and lightnings
and an
earthquake. V.6.
And
the seven angels which had the seven trumpets prepared themselves to
sound. The
narrative at this point, with all its simplicity, is full of dramatic
intensity:
And when He opened the seventh seal, silence reigned in heaven for
about a
half-hour. It was a silence of strained expectation, of breathless
suspense. The
plagues that were about to be shown in symbols were the greatest, the
most
horrible of all, the tribulations which would strike the Church would
be
awe-inspiring in their intensity. It was an ominous period of direst
portent.
After the half-hour had elapsed, an activity ensued
which prepared for the coming events: And I saw the seven angels that
stand
before God, and to them were given seven trumpets. The use of trumpets
is always
associated in Scriptures with important announcements intended for
great
multitudes. Here the seven angels are mentioned, the spirits that were
in the
immediate service of the Lord, just as Gabriel calls himself one of
those that
stand in the presence of the Lord, Luke 1, 19. They were His servants,
to carry
out His commands, and the trumpets were given to them in order that
they might
be the Lord’s heralds. They now stood ready, with their trumpets at
their
mouths, waiting for the signal to proclaim doom.
The idea that heaven is a vast temple now again comes
to the foreground: And another angel came and stood next to the altar,
having a
golden censer, and to him was given incense in abundance, that he might
add it
to the prayers of all the saints on the golden altar before the throne.
Here
again everything points to the solemnity of the occasion. There is no
hurry, no
confusion: the act of worship is performed with all the impressiveness
of holy
dignity. Many commentators identify this angel with the one great High
Priest of
the New Testament, Jesus Christ Himself. Just as the high priest of the
Old
Testament took a golden censer to sacrifice incense in the Most Holy
Place, so
the prayers of the saints, a great mass of them, are here pictured as
being
offered up to God. This was acceptable to the Lord: And the smoke of
the incense
arose with the prayers of the saints out of the hand of the angel
before God.
The straight ascent of the smoke of a sacrifice signified that God
looked upon
it graciously, that the prayers of the saints met with His approval, as
they are
sure to do if made according to His will, for the sake of the precious
merit and
the powerful intercession of the great High Priest and Mediator Jesus
Christ.
The last action of the angel was also significant:
And the angel took the censer, and filled it with fire from the altar,
and threw
it to the earth; and there occurred thunderings and voices and
lightnings and an
earthquake. The fire from the altar is a manifestation of the sevenfold
Spirit
in the Word. The proclamation of this Word is like thunder in shaking
hard
hearts, like a mighty voice in penetrating the minds, like lightning in
revealing the innermost recesses of the heart and in working knowledge
of divine
things, like an earthquake in working mighty changes, not only in the
heart and
mind of the hearers, but in their entire life. These preliminary acts
having
taken place, everything was ready for the sounding of the trumpets: And
the
seven angels that had the seven trumpets prepared themselves to trumpet.
The sounding of the first and second trumpets: V.7. The
first angel sounded, and there followed hail and fire mingled with
blood, and
they were cast upon the earth; and the third part of trees was burned
up, and
all green grass was burned up. V.8. And
the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain burning with
fire was
cast into the sea; and the third part of the sea became blood; v.9. and
the third part of the creatures which were in the sea, and had life,
died; and
the third part of the ships were destroyed. The first four trumpets set in
motion forces of ruin whose destruction is
directed against natural objects, the disasters calling to mind the
Egyptian
plagues. The first plague concerned the earth: And the first one
sounded the
trumpet; and there occurred hail and fire mingled with blood and fell
on the
earth, and the third part of the trees was consumed, and all green
grass was
consumed. Here we have the picture of a terrible storm of lightning and
hail,
leaving death and destruction in its wake, with the added horror of a
shower of
blood instead of rain. Thus it is when a hurricane of false doctrines,
especially of those of the righteousness of works, strikes the Church
of God.
Then the green pastures of His Word are sadly burned, and the tender
shoots of
the young Christians wither away.
The second plague struck the sea: And the second
angel sounded his trumpet, and what resembled a huge mountain burning
with fire
fell into the sea; and the third part of the sea became blood, and the
third
part of the creatures that were in the sea died, the living animals,
and the
third part of the ships were destroyed. Here we have a picture of a
peculiar
volcanic disturbance which includes the explosion of the volcano
itself, the
turning of the water into blood, the destruction of many marine
animals, and the
working of havoc among the shipping. Thus it is when heretical
fanaticism enters
the Christian Church, when false teachers arise and show forth
apparently great
signs and wonders, puffing themselves up in glittering greatness before
men.
Alas, only too many Christians have been led astray by such men,
leaving the
solid foundation of God's eternal Word and perishing in their own
foolishness.
The sounding of the third and fourth trumpets: V.10. And
the third angel sounded, and there fell a great star from heaven,
burning as it
were a lamp, and it fell upon a third art of the rivers and upon the
fountains
of waters; v.11. and
the name of the star is called Wormwood; and the third art of the
waters became
wormwood; and many men died of the waters because they were made
bitter. V.12. And the fourth
angel sounded, and the third part of the sun was smitten and the third
part of
the moon and the third art of the stars, so as the third art of them
was
darkened, and the day shone not for a third part of it, and the night
likewise. V.13.
And
I beheld, and heard an angel flying through the midst of heaven, saying
with a
loud voice, Woe, woe, woe, to the inhibiters of the earth by reason of
the other
voices of the trumpet of the three angels which are yet to sound! The
third plague struck the waters of the earth: And the third angel
sounded his
trumpet; and there fell from heaven a huge star like a torch, and it
fell upon
the third part of the rivers and upon the springs of water; and the
name of the
star is called Wormwood; and the third part of the waters turned to
wormwood,
and many among men died of the waters, because they had been made
bitter. Here
is the picture of an immense meteor shooting down out of the sky,
filled with a
bitter drug said to be a mortal poison which it was able to impart to
all waters
and springs with which it came in contact. Thus it has happened more
than once
that men who considered themselves shining lights and bright stars in
the
firmament of the Church have been found filled with the poison of false
doctrine, which they all too often imparted to the sermons and books
that were
spread broadcast by them. By such men the Water of Life, the pure
Gospel of the
Savior, is made bitter and poisonous, and all men that drink of this
poisoned
water fall victims to spiritual death. The description fits especially
well in
the case of the great rationalistic teachers, who poisoned the
fountains of the
pure inspired Word.
The fourth plague struck the firmament of the sky:
And the fourth angel sounded his trumpet; and the third part of the sun
was
smitten and the third part of the moon and the third part of the stars,
the
result being that the third part of them was darkened, and that the day
had no
light for its third part and the night likewise. Here is a picture of
an unusual
disturbance in the sky, by which all the bodies of light in the
firmament mere
affected in such a manner as to take away a third part of their power
both by
day and by night. This is what happens in the Church when men that call
themselves ministers of the Gospel darken the light of Scriptures with
their own
opinions, substituting arbitrariness and uncertainty for the infallible
basis of
the truth of God. Just as soon as speculations concerning the divine
Word are
introduced into the pulpit, just so soon the light of God is dimmed. It
is a
pity that, as the text notes throughout, the third art of the creatures
were
destroyed by these plagues, that a large part of the Church has always
been
struck by the various heresies. But there is still this comfort, that
the third
part is not the whole. The entire Church will: not give way to error;
God will
keep His chosen ones in His Word and faith. The portals of hell shall
not
prevail against His Church.
The narrative now again shows an interval in the
action: And I saw, and I heard an eagle (or: angel) flying in
mid-heaven with a
loud cry, Woe, woe, woe, to those that dwell upon the earth, for the
rest of the
trumpet-voices of the three angels that are about to sound their
trumpets! In
the midst of the sky, in the zenith, directly over the heads of men,
the eagle
was flying, and his screaming cry was a warning against security, a
call to
repentance, before the remaining trumpets should sound and bring still
greater
woes and distresses to the inhabitants of the earth. It is absolutely
necessary
that all Christians heed the warning words of their pastors in these
last days
of the world, lest they he overwhelmed by the woes which are coming
upon the
Church.
Summary.
The prophet, at the beginning of the third vision, sees the opening of
the
seventh seal and witnesses the blowing of the trumpets by four angels,
the
consequence being that plagues visited the earth, the sea, the waters,
and the
sky.