Selected quad for the lemma: book_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
book_n authority_n old_a testament_n 2,803 5 7.9085 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A55917 A commentary upon the divine Revelation of the apostle and evangelist, Iohn by David Pareus ... ; and specially some things upon the 20th chapter are observed by the same authour against the Millenaries ; translated out of the Latine into English, by Elias Arnold. Pareus, David, 1548-1622.; Arnold, Elias. 1644 (1644) Wing P353; ESTC R14470 926,291 661

There are 27 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

he bee deprived of understanding deny that these things are couched in the Text. And if credit be given unto their fiction Ribera in Apoc. c. 12. Num. 11. c. 13. Num. 10. there shall at Antichrists comming be no more then ten Kings in the whole world signified by the hornes of the Beast and of these three being slaine seven shal fight for Antichrist Therfore either these shal be Christian Kings or else there shall then be no Christian Kings under the Sun the falsitie whereof the Revelation doth shew Chap. 21.24 Now tel me what harshnesse or dishonour is there in it that as Paul confesseth he was sometime a blasphemer a persecutor and injurious but ignorantly and so obtained mercy the ten Kings have given their power unto the Beast against the Lamb but of ignorance and being overcome by the Lambe have repented God putting it into their hearts to hate the whore Tell me I say should this be to the dishonour of Kings which is to their great glory to have sinned indeed through ignorance but repented through the mercy of God Or is not rather the fiction of these Prophets very reproachfull scandalous and fatall who say that toward Antichrists rising there shal be no where any Emperor or Romane Empire that there shal be no King in any place save those seven that remaine of the ten fighting for Antichrist And seeing they every hour expect their Antichrist to arise as they say out of the tribe of Dan what do they but threaten an utter destruction both to the Emperor Romane Empire and all Christian Kings For according unto these mens doctrine as then there shal bee no Emperor no Empire so neither King of France Spain England Poland Hungary c. or if there be any they shall be Antichrists Life-gard and vassals Now tell me who they are that cast reproaches upon Christian Kings set their Crownes awry and menace them with eternall damnation Wherefore blessed shall ye be if ye hear and keep the Commandements of this Prophesie that ye may have right to the tree of life and may enter through the gates into the City But he that wil hurt let him hurt still and he that is filthy let him be filthy still and he that is righteous let him be righteous still and he that is holy let him be holy still Amen Even so come Lord Iesus and sanctifie us in trueth Thy word is trueth Amen PROVERB 27.6 Better are the wounds of a friend then the deceitfull kisses of an enemy The Authours PREFACE UPON THE REVELATION OF THE APOSTLE AND EVAGELIST IOHN HAPPILY BEGVN AND PROPOVNDED VNTO HIS AVDITORY IN THE VNIVERSITY Ann. 1608. IF any of you my Hearers admire wherefore after the Exposition of Pauls Epistle unto the Hebrews I should passe by so many excellent Bookes of the New Testament and take in hand the Interpretation of the last viz. the Revelation the Authour and Canonicall authority whereof hath long since variously bin disputed of and which being replenished with great secrets types and darke sentences is scarcely intelligible unto any The Objections against the Revelation and though it be entitled a Revelation yet seemeth not in the least to be a Booke revealed but rather shut up and sealed which seemeth also to bee the reason that it is placed at the end of the New Testament from the interpretation whereof because of its obscurity not a few of the ablest Divines have hitherto abstained and lastly seeing it hath long since bin held that it doth contain some things contrary to Apostolicall Faith and favour the heresie of the Chiliasts If I say any man wondreth at this my purpose such a one I would have with me to acknowledge that these very objections besides other causes which now are not requisite to be related with which this most Heavenly Book is injuriously charged offereth occasion unto me to interpret the same that ye might understand that the Revelation of John is so farre from the guilt of these accusations which do not a little weaken the Canon of our Faith that we rather may say of it what Jerome most truly said of the Prophesie of Isaias Whatsoever is in Holy Writ whatsoever can bee uttered by the tongue or received by the senses of mortall man is contained in this Booke which least it might seeme to be spoken by me without ground Prooem in Isa I thought good to praemise a few things in way of Preface in which I will handle somethings more briefly by other Interpreters more largely handled and somethings properly belonging to our purpose I shall more diligently explicate CHAPTER I. Of the Authour of the Revelation WHo was the Authour of this Booke Lib. 7. hist c. 25. Haer. 51. would never in our times have beene questioned unlesse Eusebius and Epiphanius had left in writing that some of old time did scruple the thing For Eusebius recordeth that in his time it was diversly on both parts disputed touching the Revelation Afterward he saith there were some who supposed from the Bookes called De Repromissionibus of one DIONYSIUS an Alexandrine Bishop and also from one Caius an old Writer that the Revelation was not written by John the Apostle but forged by the Hereticke Cerinthus who feined an earthly Kingdome to Christ in which the Saints should have their fill of corporall pleasures a thousand yeeres into which sense some whom they called Chiliasts men in other respects of note in the Church drew the twentieth Chapter of the Revelation But other Divines and worthy Fathers have alwayes demonstrated that there is no such thing in that Chapter and we also will shew it on the place But so farre is it from trueth The Revelation not written by Cerinthus that the blasphemous Heretick Cerinthus could be the Author of this Booke as nothing is lesse credible or more unlikely For Cerinthus blasphemously maintained that Christ was not before Mary But the Revelation throughout teacheth and proveth the Eternall Deity of Christ by such evident Arguments against Cerinthus Ebion Photinus and such like enemies of Christ as almost no Scripture affirmeth the same more clearly However therefore it is no marveile Lib. 4. adversus Mar. that the Marcionites as Tertulian recordeth as also the Alogian and Tatian Heretickes as Epiphanius Augustine and Philastrius testifie did reject the Revelation as being contrary to their heresie Yet the Grecians of old had no reason neither to this day hath any man a just or probable cause Iohn the Apostle author of the Revelation to call into question the Authour or Canonicall Authority of this most Sacred Booke That John the Apostle whose Gospell and three Canonicall Epistles are extant is the Author may be proved by solid and undoubted reasons First the Title it selfe sheweth that he is the Author 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Revelation of John the Divine But thou wilt say it is not said John the Apostle or Evangelist Lib. 3. hist cap. 13.
Touching the Canonicall authority of the Revelation NOw by these things the divine Authority of the Booke doth necessarily follow For if the Apostle Iohn be the Author the Divine and Canonicall Authority cannot justly bee questioned For the Apostles writings are Apostolicall Besides the Author doth againe and againe testifie that he received his Revelation from Christ and wrote the same by the Augels command This also the testimony of the Ancient Church confirmeth Concil Ancyran in appendice For the Revelation is alledged under the name of John and as Canonicall Scripture by the most ancient Councell of Ancyra which was before that of Nice also in the Councell of Carthage III. Can. 47. and some others following The Revelation also hath bin alwayes of Canonicall authority with the Greeke and Latine Fathers although certaine Graecians before Dionysius Alexandrinus did some what scruple the same as of old some of the Latine Church had their doubts touching the Epistle to the Hebrews because it did seeme to favour Novatus as Ierome writeth unto Dardanus But the scruple of one or a few of the Ancients can no more disanull the authority of any Canonicall Book of Scripture then the scruple of a few now can doe And howsoever Luther in his first Edition of the New Testament in the Germane tongue Published anno 1526. Sixtus Senensis Biblioth Ribera in Apoc. Prooem cap. 1. did not reckon the two latter Epistles of Iohn the Epistles also of Iames and Iude among the Apostolicall and Canonicall Scriptures Not indeed as some Papists write because he could not beare those words Chap. 14.13 Blessed are the dead c. because their workes follow them which verily doe notably overthrow their fiction of the Soules of the Saints going into Purgatory but rather because he thought that such obscure Visions and Figures were not so well agreeable unto the light of the New Testament notwithstanding in another Edition Anno 1535. hee speaketh more liberally in the Preface touching these Bookes neither do they who at this day are called Lutherans any longer question the Canonicall authority of the Revelation Alcas Vestig nota 2. Prcoem For our part we did not judge the Revelation was therefore to bee received that we might abuse the darke and obscure sayings of the Booke to vomit out the venom of our malice against the Pope of Rome as that upstart Interpreter before mentioned hath begun to calumniate us but because the reasons before laid down and many more do confirm our beliefe and because by the Revelation we are manifestly taught that that son of perdition lifting himselfe up against whatsoever is called God and sitting in the Temple of God as if he were God is no other but that Capitoline Iove even to this day treading down all powers under his feet But a man might justly wonder that Popish Writers do not tremble at the very sight of this Booke and how they are not afraid to explicate the Prophesie by their Commentaries Why Papists write Commentaries upon the Revelation but that the thing it selfe speaketh they chiefly doe it seeing they can neither wholly extinguish it nor keepe it any longer from the people at least to deprave the oracles thereof by their false Interpretations the which notwithstanding they labour for in vaine seeing it is as cleare as the Sun at Noon day that under the Image of the Beast and False-Prophet seducing the Inhabitants of the Earth and of the whorish woman committing fornication with the Kings of the Earth and of the great Citie on seven hils ruling over the Kings of the Earth is represented the Monarchicall and Papall Sea of Rome and under the Image of Locusts the innumerable vermine of the Clergy and Monkes under the Type of Merchandize which no man Antichrist beeing discovered shall buy any more are set forth Romish Indulgences and buying and selling of Soules c. CHAPTER III. Of the obscurity of the Booke What it is and whence with the remedies of the same AUGUSTINE writing of the darkenesse of the Revelation saith Lib. 20. de C. D. ca. 17 In this Booke which is named a Revelation are contained many darke things that the Readers mind might be exercised and in it are a few things by the clearnesse whereof the rest with labour may be sought out chiefly because it so repeateth the same things after a diverse manner that whereas it may seeme to speake of different matters by diligent search we shall find that they are the selfe same things diversly expressed And JEROM Tom. 3. ad paul Ep. 1. In the Revelation saith he is shewed a Booke sealed with seven Seales which though thou give it to a man that can rend to read it he will answer thee I cannot it is sealed And afterward The Revelation of Iohn hath as many Sacraments as words I have said but little in regard of the worth of the Booke It is beyond all praise In every of the words are hid manifold understandings So indeed it is for the sharpnesse of mans wit is blinder then beetles in the true understanding as of other divine Scripture so of this also unlesse it be enlightned by the beames of the Holy Ghost but the causes of this obscurity are plain First the whole Booke is Propheticall touching future things Write The causes of the darknesse of the Revelation saith the Angell the things thou hast seene which are and which shall be afterward But future things as future because they are not in any sense are either altogether unknowne or being foreknown are conceived not so much by the understanding as in hope Adde That these future things are not declared by plaine words The difference of Visions neither defined by notes or markes of times places and persons but are revealed unto Iohn and so written in darke and aenigmaticall Visions It is true many Visions in Scripture were plaine as set before the eyes of the mind or bodie Dan. 5.5 1. Kin. 6.17 Exod. 3.2 Act. 10.11 Act. 23.11 so King Belshazzar saw a hand writing upon the plaister of the wall Elisha saw fiery Charrets round about him and Moses the bush burning before him Peter a sheet with foure-footed Beasts let downe from Heaven unto the Earth Paul saw the Lord standing by him in the night c. In these there was no great difficultie But there are other Visions more intricate when the Images or Representations signifying some secret thing are exhibited unto the minds of men either sleeping or awake the mysteries of which except they be revealed are so obscure as that they cannot be found out by the understanding of mortall man Of this kinde were the dreames of Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar the Visions also of Ezechiel Daniel and Zacharie unto which we worthily may compare the Visions of the Revelation The secrets indeed of the aforesaid dreames God not onely revealed unto the singular benefit of them which dreamt the same but also would have them
and Interpreters of the Revelation and thus I have freed this Booke from a three-fold slander first as if it were not Canonicall secondly obscure as not to be understood thirdly of neglect as if for this cause the worthiest Divines had hitherto shunned the interpretation thereof There remaine two other scandals to be taken away one of the order that this Booke is the last of the New Testament the other of errour that it containes somethings not agreeable to Apostollical Faith both these clouds will be dispersed by the consideration of the dignity of this Prophesie which like the Morning Starre above the rest shineth most clearely among the other Bookes of the New Testament What therefore respects the Order so farre is it from diminishing the worth of the Booke in any kind as it the more commendeth the same For it is in very deed a divine Seale by which the Holy Ghost was pleased not without-reason to close up both the Old and the New Canon of the divine Scriptures which manifestly appeareth from that propheticall Protestation at the end of the Booke by which such are pronounced blessed who observe the words of this Prophesie the falsifiers on the contrary that presume to adde or take ought there-from are threatned with curses for unto them that adde Rev. 22.18 God shall adde the plagues that are written in this Booke to them that take away The Canonicall authority of the Revelation confirmed from the order thereof God shall take away his part out of the Booke of Life and out of the HOLY CITY and from the things that are written in this Booke What could be expressed more honourable concerning this Prophesie for if it be unlawfull to adde ought therto then certainly in all respects it is absolute perfect divine and the word of God unto which nothing without impiety may bee added by men Againe if nothing may be taken away from the same then it is Sacred inviolable divine and the word of God which onely cannot bee broken Ioh. 10.35 Thus we see that the Canonicall dignity of this Booke is established by the order it selfe And hereby it is plainly made equall with the divine Bookes of Moses himself Deut. 4.2 12.32 the Prince of Prophets For as those because they are the first of the Sacred Canon are often confirmed with this Seale Ye shall not adde unto the word which I command you neither shall ye diminish ought from it c. So this Booke as it were closing the Holy Canon is confirmed with the like Seale that nothing may bee added to it nothing taken away from it As Moses therefore was the Chieftaine of the Prophets leading the first rankes So John was chiefe of the Prophets closing up or leading the last rankes and here I willingly assent to Bezas opinion most solidly and truely affirming that it seemed good to the Holy Ghost to gather into this pretious Booke In praefat Apoc. those things which remained to be fulfilled after Christs comming of the praedictions of the former Prophets and also to adde some things so farre as concerned us to know Praefat. in Daniel A like honourable Title that worthy Divine JOHN OECOLAMPADIUS giveth unto this Booke That it is the best Interpreter of all the Prophets Neither will I speake more touching the order save this one thing that in it appeareth also a manifest reason of time When the Revelation was written For it is the last Booke of the New Testament not because it is last in dignity but in time For Ierome writeth that Domitian raising after Nero the second persecution against the Christians Iohn wrote the Revelation in the 14. yeer of his reigne in the I le called Patmos In vita Iohannis With whom Irenaeus a most ancient Writer doth agree affirming that John saw the Revelation not long before his time but almost saith hee in our age towards the end of Domitian his Empire Lib. 3. c. 25 Wherefore the Apocalyps was written in the ninety sixth yeer of Christ after all the other Bookes of the New Testament were written For Iohn out-lived all the Apostles and Canonicall Writers and lived as Sophronius records untill the third yeere of Trajane which from Christs birth was Anno 102 and after his passion as Ierome recordeth 68. In vita Iohannis and from the destruction of Jerusalem 25. Now whereas some affirme that Iohn wrote his Gospell after the Revelation it is without any probabilitie But we come to speake of the utility of the Revelation This Booke doth excellently shine forth in point of doctrine for it truely teacheth the Propheticall and Apostolicall Faith and much illustrates many articles of the Gospell The profitablenes of the Revelation or common places In speciall it proveth the eternall Deity of Christ with such weighty arguments as scarcely more excellent are to be found in any other part of Scripture absolutely ascribing unto Christ many attributes which are onely proper unto Iehovah viz. that he is Alpha and Omega the first and the last the beginning and the end the Almighty that the Lambe standing in the Throne of the Deity equall in majesty with the Father is worshipped by all the Heavenly Inhabitants that he judgeth the adversaries rules the Nations with an iron rod that hee is the King of kings and Lord of lords c. It plainely also maintaineth the Doctrine of Christs Mediatorship and work of our Redemption through his blood calling him the faithfull Witnesse the First begotten from the dead Redemption of christ the Prince of the kings of the earth the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world who hath washed us in his blood from our sins and made us Priests and Kings to God and the Father c. It sets forth the afflicted state and condition of the Church in this life especially in the latter times by evident types viz. that the woman bringing forth a Man-Child the Ruler of the Nations shall be driven into the Wildernesse by the Dragon and the Beast where she shall remaine hid from the sight of men when the two Witnesses shall prophesie against the Dragon and the Beast and shall indeed be slaine but being againe raysed to life they shall bee taken up into Heaven c. By which verily it is manifest that nothing else is signified then that the Church in Antichrists reigne shall bee obscure and secret in the wildernesse being oppressed in Babylon it selfe the Seat of Antichrist The flight of the Church into the wildernesse untill at length Babylon decaying shee being commanded to come out of her shall againe come forth and be seen of men By which that cavill is easily answered Where the Church was before Luthers time if the Papacy were not The Papacy indeed was the Apostaticall Church it was Babylon having nothing but the bare Name of the Holy Citie But the true Church lye hid as captivated and oppressed in the same
And secondly the companie of the foure beasts with the thanksgiving of them both 4 And round about the Throne were foure and twenty seates and upon the seats I saw foure and twenty Elders sitting clothed in white raiment and they had on their heads crownes of gold 5 And out of the Throne proceeded lightnings and thunderings and voyces and there were seuen lampes of fire burning before the Throne which are the seven spirits of God 6 And before the Throne there was a sea of glasse like unto Crystall in the midst of the Throne and round about the Throne were foure beasts full of eyes before and behinde 7 And the first beast was like a Lyon and the second beast like a calfe and the third beast had a face as a man and the fourth beast was like a flying eagle 8 And the foure beasts had each of them sixe vvings about him they were full of eyes within they rest not day and night saying Holy holy holy Lord God Allmighty which was is and is to come 9 And when those beasts give glory and honour thankes to him that sate on the Throne vvho liveth for ever and ever 10 The foure and twentie Elders fall down before him that sate on the Throne worship him that liveth for ever and ever and cast their crownes before the Throne saying 11 Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour and povver for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are were created THE COMMENTARIE ANd about the Throne After he had described the majestie of him that sate on the Throne that is eyther God absolutely or Christ the glorious Iudge about which we need not to contend For the sence is all one because God sitteth and judgeth in Christ Now he comes to describe the attendance he saw about the throne And this second part of the Chapter is a description of the foure and twenty Elders sitting about the same and of the lightnings proceeding out of the throne c. And of the foure beasts in the midst and round about it with the thanksgiving of them all In which diverse men seek diverse mysteries Lyra understands by the seates the Cathedral Churches Lyraes mysteries concerning the seats and their Elders and by the foure twenty Elders all Bishops alluding to so manie orders of Priests whom David ordained weekly for the service of the tabernacle 1 Chro. 24. But what need of Cathedrals in heaven Hierome understands by them the foure twentie bookes of the Old Testament but how fitly I will not here dispute of Others will have so many Angels to bee noted out therby But Chap. 7. v. 11. the Angels are differe need from the Elders Others suppose more probablie that hereby is represented the companie of the Patriarks Prophets godly Iudges Kings and to be short of all the saintes under the law who excelled in faith and piety and now triumph with Christ in heaven They are said to be foure and twentie a finite number beeing put for an indefinite Some understand it of twelve Patriarcks and twelve Apostles but that cannot bee for what then should become of the rest of the Patriarcks Prophets Iudges and other godly governours and kings We therefore doe rather Iudge that by this number is noted a perfect Senate or assemblie which ordinarily is accounted entire if it consist of 24 persons They are said to be Elders because age teacheth wisdom and skill in judgement And indeed Senatus a Senate comes from senium olde age They sit on thrones 1 Cor. 6.2 because they rest from their labours and shall with Christ judge the world Angels not as if Christ could not judge the world without them for the Father hath given unto him all power and all judgement both in heaven and in earth but 1 Matt. 28.18 Ioh. 5.22 because he is pleased to communicate this honour unto the saintes according unto the promise Chap. 3.21 And 2 because his judgement is righteous which all the saintes acknowledge and assent unto This exposition to let passe what others say is undoubtedlie agreable unto the analogie of faith in case any mysterie be hereby typified out unto us But because these Elders doe not alwayes remaine sitting on their thrones for sometimes they rise up sometimes they fall downe and worship and sing Halelujah to God and to the Lambe as v. 10. Chap. 5.8 Chap. 11.16 Chap. 19.4 beeing the chiefe actors in setting forth the prayses of God I hence observe that in the Revelation where diverse persons are brought in some tarying and others departing this first apparition or company is brought in before the amplification of the vision not under the forme of young men but of Elders for reverence and gravitie sake neither doth this any way contradict our former exposition for in an honourable assembly is peace and honour by the gratulatorie harmonie is figured out the office of the prophetical Church in heaven And indeed I see not how we should otherwise understand what is meant by the often signing of these Elders except we understand it as alluding to the custome and manner of enterludes Clothed in white raiment and had on their heads crownes c. By this twofold ornament the priestly and kingly dignitie of the saintes is shadowed out white garments that is pure bright and undefiled robes such as become priests of righteousnes And with all the puritie of the saintes in heaven and the integritie of the divine judgement is hereby ●●gnifyed Now whence the saintes have this puritie we are taught Chap. 7.14 namely by washing their garments in the blood of the Lambe that is perfectly putting on the Lord Christ Iesus who is this white robe wherewith we delight to be cloathed and by which we are acceptable to God Crownes of gold on their heads That is most pretious crownes for what is more pretious then gold they have them on their heads both because they reigne as kings with Christ Reve. 1.6 who hath made us kings and priests to God and his Father as also because they have overcome sin satan and the world This is that crowne of life promised to the Angel of Smyrna Chap. 2.10 and unto all who love the Lord. Jam. 2 Tim. 4.8 1.12 This is that crowne of righteousnes wherein Paul rejoyced and which is laid up for all them that love the appearing of Christ This is that crowne of glorie 1 Pet. 5.4 which fadeth not away but shall certainely be enjoyed by all the faithfull servants of Christ And out of the throne proceeded This second apparition shewes the majestie of him that sate on the throne out of which proceeded lightnings thunders voyces here we need not seek for any other mysteries but onely to take notice that these things are proofes of the omnipotencie and divine majestie of Christ who sends forth such judgements from his throne against the wicked as
sung unto the Lamb 1. By both companies representing the Church triumphant who celebrate the benefit of their redemption glorification obtained by the blood of the Lamb. v. 8.9.10 2. By a third apparition or companie of Angels celebrating the worthinesse power and divine glorie of the Lambe v. 11.12 3 By a fourth apparition of all creatures rendring prayses and blessings unto God on the throne and unto the Lambe v. 13. And last of all the two first apparitions of the 24 Elders foure beasts closing up the thanksgiving by a divine adoration v. 14. The first part of the Chapter A description of the booke sealed 1 And I saw in the right hand of him that sate on the throne a booke written within and on the backside sealed with seven seales THE COMMENTARIE ANd or then I saw I will not here repeat all the diverse opinions of interpreters concerning this book who rather obscure then unfold the obscurity thereof but onely will cite some of the most probable The common opinion about the booke Most interpret it either of the booke of the old Testament or els the whole volume of Gods booke both old and new which is in the right hand of God because it is inspired by the holy Ghost and the contents thereof are in the hands of God alone This booke is written within that is obscurely in the old Testament without that is openly in the new or within as respecting the mystical sence without the litterall It is sealed with seven seales because the mysteries thereof are hid from humane reason 1 Cor. 2.14 It cannot be opened by any creature because the naturall man receiveth not the things which are of God The Lambe alone is worthy to open it because he onely hath fulfilled the scriptures and he onely doth reveal unto us outwarly by his word and inwardly by his spirit the hid things thereof These things in themselves are true and according to godlines but I judge they serve little to the purpose in hand because here he treats not about the obscurity or manifestation of legal types neyther are the mysteries thereof revealed in this booke but things of another nature and which concerne the condition of the Church under the Gospel Neither can it be said that the old and new Testament was as a sealed booke unto all creatures untill the time of Iohn seeing it would then follow that both the Prophets and Apostles were ignorant of the writings of Moses and the Prophets Besides all the bookes of the new Testament were then already written and so not shut but knowen unto all such as had their sences exercised in the scriptures of God even as the preaching of the Apostles opened a doore unto the faith of the Gospell unto every creature And therefore this interpretation seems to be repugnant to the holy scriptures and injurious to the Apostolicall Churches They seem to come neerer the marke Another opinion of the booke who understand it of the booke of Gods providence For the scriptures attribute three sorts of bookes to God 1. Of his providence 2. of life and 3. of universall judgement of which we have treated Chap. 3.5 But these also differ in opinion Some take it in a generall way for the booke of Gods decree concerning the governement of the world which interpretation is to large seeing not all Gods secret judgements but onely such which concerne the state of the Church are here intended Therefore I rather assent to them The booke is the Revelation it self who understand it litterally of the booke in which all these things were contained which Christ was pleased to reveale unto Iohn concerning the last times the which he afterward penned and left the same unto the Churches This booke I say is the revelation it self not as if he saw a materiall booke but a visionall booke so to speak wherin was written Gods secret decree touching the future event of the Church and her enemies Thus also Andreas Ribera expound it For first this is the same booke which Iohn after it was opened is commanded to eat up that is fully and clearly to take knowledge thereof And which was sweet in his mouth like hony that is he was much delighted with the knowledge of so high mysteries but by and by it became bitter in his belly as gall that is he was much greeved in foreseeing the great calamities of the Church as we shall see Chap. 10. for the booke there mentioned is the Revelation given unto Iohn Furthermore the contents of the whole Revelation is taken out of this booke For at the opening of the seventh seale seven Angels are said to come forth sounding with trumpets signifying thereby the diverse changes of the Church in the third vision At the sounding of the seventh trumpet the Dragon and two beasts are raised up against the Church in vision the fourth Presently here upon follow seven Angels powring forth the vials of the last plagues upon the earth in vision the fift Afterward one of these seven Angels pronounceth with a mighty voyce the judgement of the great whore and ruin of Babylon in vision the sixt At length the new Ierusalem with the marriage of the Lamb is represented unto John in the last vision whence we see that the whole matter of the Revelation was comprehended in this booke not included in a few Chapters viz. from 6. to 11. as Alcasar supposeth To be short the circumstances of this booke doe altogether agree with the former preface For as Christ is there said to receive the Revelation of God and by an Angel to deliver it unto Iohn so this booke was in the right hand of him that sate on the throne taken out of his hād by the Lamb opened delivered unto the Angel who gave it to Iohn commanding him to eat it Chap. 10. Forasmuch therefore as all things thus agree together there is no question but this booke here spoken of is the revelation it self delivered unto the Apostle These things observed the three following circumstances will bee the lesse obscure 1. The booke is held in the right hand of him that sits on the throne because God is the author of the revelation in Gr. it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at the right hand and is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the hand as appeares v. 7. where the Lambe takes the booke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 out of his right hand therefore it was In and not at his right hand as some will have it Now he is said to have it in his right hand to the end to give it unto Christ to open As men reach out with their right hands what they give unto others And I suppose we need not seek for any other mysterie in this expression 2. It is written within and without that is there was no place emptie in it For we are to understand this litterally This booke was not made as
by this place or any other This we must leave to God and to time The same was said before in the last Act of the Fift Vision Rev. 16.20 Rev. 6.14 Every Iland fled and the Mountaines were not found Also in the last Act of the Second Vision And the Heaven departed as a Scrowle rolled together and every Mountaine and Iland were mooved out of their places Which place notwithstanding we interpreted somewhat otherwise because of the circumstances But I see not by what shew of reason this change of Heaven and Earth here can be darkened by an Allegory Now it shall not be till towards the last Iudgement and therefore it remains firme that the same is here described The dead corporally are here understood 12. And I saw the dead small and great He had seen the Iudge girded about with Iudgement Now he seeth the guilty standing before the Iudgement Seat whom hee describeth First from their former state by calling them The dead after the common Law of nature but then raised from death to life by the power of God he speaks not of men dead in sins as in ver 5. but of such as dyed corporally and now were raised up to Iudgement But shall not the living also then be judged Yea verily 2. Cor. 5.10 Rom. 14.9 10. for we must all appeare before the Iudgement Seat of Christ That he may be Iudge of the quicke and the dead and be Lord both of the dead and the living By the dead therefore are understood the living also by an Argument from the lesser If the dead shall appeare before the Iudgement Seat how much more the living But the dead alone are named either because the number of the dead from Adam till the last day 1 Cor. 15.52 shall be far greater then such as live on Earth when that day commeth Or because those that remain living shal be accounted as dead because they shall be changed in the twinkling of an eye Secondly he describes them from their age and condition for the words may be understood of both Great and Small That is as well the powerfull Tyrants of the world Emperours Kings Princes and Great men as Subjects and men of low condition Or properly Great in Age and stature that is growne men and women Small also that is dying in their child-hood by this partition he sheweth that all and every one without any exception are to be judged for the Iudgement shall be universall no man shall bee so Great as to escape the same none so small as to be excluded 2 Cor. 5.10 but every one shall have right without respect of persons as the Apostle witnesseth We must all appeare before the Iudgement Seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad Lumb lib. dist 44. SCHOOL-MEN suppose that in the Resurrection all shal be as if they were about 33. yeers old which was Christs age but we leave it as uncertain What they speake of the stature that every one shall receive his owne measure of body is more agreeable to this place Thirdly he describes them from their future state Standing in the sight of God or before God to wit to bee judged as guiltie To stand before God signifies sometimes in this Booke as above the Heavenly Ministery of the Saints and Angels Here it signifies to be brought to Iudgement as appeares by what followeth By the dead standing he meaneth them that were raised from death to life XLI Argument of Christs deitie Before God The Iudge hee absolutely calleth God but CHRIST is the Iudge Therefore Christ is God absolutely And the Bookes were opened The judiciall processe is noted by imitation of humane Courts in which the whole processe is wont to be drawn into Protocols from whence the Iudge at length determineth and pronounceth sentence according to the Acts and Proofes not that it shall bee so really for God from whose eyes nothing is hid will not make use of long examination but the equity of the Iudge is noted by a Metaphor taken from humane Courts where the Iudge pronounceth sentence according to the written Law and the Acts and Proofes agreeing thereunto It is an Allusion unto the words of Daniel speaking thus of this IVDGEMENT Dan. 7.10 The Iudgement was set and the Bookes were opened Origene understands it of the books of conscience Comm. ad Rom. 14. which now are hid not to God but to men For the hidden things of the heart are not now known But then they shall be Opened that is manifested to the consciences of all and every one so as there shall be no place left of excuse or withdrawing Thus no man shall be injured because every one shall either be accused or discharged by his own conscience Augustine takes it a little otherwise Lib. 20. de C. D. c. 14 of the bookes of the Old and New Testament in which God hath prescribed unto all what is to bee done or Omitted in this life which shall then be opened because according to them the Iudge will pronounce sentence Rom. 2.16 When God shall judge the secrets of men Marke 16.16 Io. 12.48 Lib. 20. de C. D. c. 14 by Iesus Christ according to my Gospel He that beleeveth and is baptised shall be saved but he that beleeveth not shall be damned The word that I have spoken the same shall judge him in the last day And another Booke was opened This Austine understands of every mans Booke of Life what he hath done or not done according to those former Books But the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of every one is not in the Text but simply which is the Booke of Life to wit in which God hath written from all eternitie the names of them that shall be saved through Christ of which often mention is made in this Revelation Chap. 3.5 13.8 17.8 c. Not that God hath neede of a Booke but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or by humane affection is noted the certainty of Praedestination viz. that God knowes all and every of the Elect even as men know a thing which for memory sake they set downe in writing This Booke therefore shall also be opened because then it shall appear who were Elect who Reprobates who truely beleeved in Christ who not who truely worshipped God Mat. 25.32 who were hypocrites for then Christ will sever the sheep from the goats who in this life were mixt one amongst another And the dead were judged This shall be the denouncing of the sentence the equity whereof is commended by a two-fold reason both because every one shall be judged out of the things written in the Bookes As also because he shall receive according to his workes For what concernes the Bookes whither we take them for the scriptures which are now the rules of our Faith and actions Or the inward working
written for the understanding of all But the my steries of the Visions although he revealed them to his servants and Prophets yet hee kept them secret from all other men namely that indeed prophane men might alwayes set light by things so obscure but the godly even by the obscurity thereof be the more stirred up to the searching out of divine mysteries The obscurity ought not to keepe us from searthing And although we can scarcely and with much difficultie come unto the understanding of all the secrets of this Booke notwithstanding the difficultie ought not to affright or to keep us from searching but rather stir up a more diligent enquiry into the same Many things in the Booke are without any shadowes of darke Types as speaking plainely of the punishments of the ungodly of the blessednesse and reward of the Saints c. in which lies no obscurity In many Types also the signification is plaine and the Analogie with the things signified not obscure as the Analogie of the seven Candlestickes with the seven Churches of the Lamb with Christ of the woman with the Church of the Dragon with Satan of the Beast and False-Prophet with Antichrist of the Locusts with the devouring Monkes of Babylon and the Great Whore with Rome of the seven heads of the Beast with the seven hils of Rome In the other more obscure Visions we have three helps by whch in some measure wee may dive into the understanding of them viz. the Propheticall Scripture Historie and experience For first after we have compared the Types of the Revelation with the Visions and Phrases of the ancient Prophets Remedies of the darknes in speciall with Ezechiel Daniel and Zacharie we shall find a great likenesse in them and thence receive much light for example In Chap. 4.5 it is said there were seven Lamps of fire burning before the throne which plainly appeareth to be taken out of Zach. 4.10 where the seven Lampes are said to be the seven eyes of Iehovah running too and fro through the whole Earth By which undoubtedly is signified the ubiquitie of Gods power and providence Out of the same Chapter is taken that in Chap. 11.4 two witnesses are said to be two Olive trees and two Candlesticks standing before the face of the Lord of the Earth Examples of which kinde we shall observe many more in the course of our Interpretation If from Johns time we diligently run over the History of the Empire and Romane Church and precisely compare the principall events with the Types of the Revelation certainly we shall see much light to come unto these Visions The Romane and Ecclesiasticall Historie testifies that diverse storms of persecutions were raised against the Christians by Romane Tyrants Eusebius recordeth out of EGESIPPUS Lib. 3. hist cap. 32. that the Church did not long after the Apostles time remain an undefiled Virgine but by little and little through the ambition and contention of Priests declined from Apostolicall sincerity But after CONSTANTINES time In vita Malchi saith JEROM shee became greater indeed in wealth but lesse in vertues After-Histories also testifie that the Romane Bishops by pride and subtiltie namely under a pretence of the primacy left by the Apostle Peter as also of Christs Vicar-ship bequeathed unto them they through the connivency or neglect of the Emperours not onely usurped power over the City of Rome but also took into their owne hands the very spoile of the Empire and at last established this Sacred Empire of the West the direct or indirect power whereof should wholly be in the Popes Holinesse All which things do not obscurely teach us what is meant by the opening of the Seales The arrogance and subtilty of Romish Bishops by the stars falling from heaven to the earth by the Beast speaking great and blasphemous things what is intended by the Beast False-Prophet and Image of the Beast what lastly by the whorish woman sitting on the Beast and ruling over the Kings of the Earth in the great Citie upon seven Mountaines Lastly if we rightly consider the experience of the present times two nuts are not more alike then is the Beast and Purpled Whore to the Papacy then the Locusts unto the Popish Clergy then the impure Frogs proceeding out of the mouth of the Dragon Beast and False-Prophet unto the Popes Messengers being hooded like to Frogs viz the Iesuites cracking miracles and running too and fro by Sea and Land unto the Kings of the Earth Rev. 16 13 14 to gather them unto the Battell of that great Day of God Almighty These things I say will in some measure bee remedies against the darkenesse of the Booke Vnto which in the last place wee must adde diligent meditation and ardent prayer that the Spirit of God who revealed these mysteries to Iohn do enlighten the eyes of our mindes with heavenly knowledge to finde out the wisedome of this Booke For blessed is hee that readeth Rev. 1.3 22.7.14 and blessed are they that heare the words of this Prophesie and keepe them that is which diligently meditate and labour exactly to weigh these oracles in an equall ballance with the events past present and to come CHAPTFR IV. Touching Ancient and Moderne Interpreters of the Revelation and of the manner of Interpreting observed by them I Have spoken of the Authour and Canonicall Authority and obscurity of the Revelation and shewed that in these things is nothing to hinder us from the interpretation thereof The objection about the Interpreters is of no weight I confesse that not a few Divines of great account as Luther Melanchthon Bucer Martyr Calvin Beza and others have abstained from the Interpretation of the Revelation But this neither doth lessen the authority of the Booke neither doth it prejudice other Interpreters for who knowes whither the darkenesse of the Book or their other waighty labours or want of time did occasion the same certaine it is they no way questioned the authority of the Booke In the meane while in all Ages there have beene excellent Teachers of the Church who have laboured to illustrate the secrets of this Booke by their Commentaries The Ancientest that have written upon the Revelation are Iustine Martyr In vita Iohannu and Irenaeus Bishop of Lyons and Melito of Sardis as Ierome and Eusebius record But their Commentaries have not been preserved untill our times Eus lib. 5. hist. ca. 25. save onely that some few fragments of this nature touching the ten hornes of the Beast the two horned Beast of the image Character Number and Name of the Beast arising out of the Sea are found in IRENAEUS Lib. 5. Cap. 21.23.25 Among Augustins workes wee finde a few Homilies upon the Revelation which notwithstanding are ascribed to Ticonius by Bede who himselfe also hath commented some things upon the Apocalyps But Austine in that divine Commentary de Civitate Dei endeavours to search not a few mysteries of this Booke touching
Gog and Magog Lib. 20. de C. D. à cap. 7. usque ad 18. touching the thousand yeeres of Satans binding and loosing of the first and second Resurrection of the Saints reigning with Christ a thousand yeers of the fire falling from heaven and devouring the ungodly of the casting of the devill and his followers into the lake of fire of the dead which the Sea Death and Hell shall give up to be judged and lastly touching the New Heaven and the New Earth c. Wee have also some what upon the Revelation under the name of Ambrose but it may plainely bee gathered from the worke it selfe that it is later then Ambrose In the latter Ages among Monkes and Schoolemen almost no Booke hath had so many Interpreters as the Apocalyps seeing no man but thought it a fine thing to exercise his wit in the opening of such dark Aenigmaes either for ostentation sake or to delight himselfe with Allegories a long Catalogue of which even above an hundred as well of such as are extant as not Alcasar Vestigat Not. 26. Prooem that upstart Interpreter before mentioned hath reckoned up And among these hee commends foure Manu-scripts which he found in the Libraries of Spaine Vndoubtedly our Germany hath more I have seene a compendious Exposition of Iohns Revelation written in the yeere 1486. by Iohannes Hilten a Franciscane who also as they say foretold many other things At Heidelberg in the Librarie of WISEDOMS Colledge is extant a Commentarie of two big Volumes written a little before that time by Richard Faber of Laudenburg an Augustinian Luther also published a short Commentary upon the Apocalyps at Witeberg Anno. 1528. sent unto him out of Livonia having no name unto it the which Conr. Gesnerus in his Bibliotheca ascribeth unto Iohn Husse But it plainly appeareth to be more ancient The Postill of Lyra ascribes the prologue of that namelesse Authour which beginneth thus All that will live godly c. unto Gilbertus Pictaviensis who flourished under the Emperour Cunradus about the yeer 1140. But by the 20th Chapter it appears not to be so ancient for the Authour there disputing touching the thousand yeeres testifies that hee wrote in the yeer from the Incarnation of Christ 1357. Which saith he is our present date He often expresly interpreteth the Papacy for Antichrists kingdom the Pope for Antichrist which therefore I rehearse least any might imagine that wee were the first Authours of this opinion Yea Pope Gregory above a 1000. yeers ago doubted not confidently to say that that Priest should be Antichrist or his Forerunner who should arrogate the Title of VNIVERSAL unto himself which a while after as is knowne the Bishops of Rome themselves did doe But of this more in its place Alcasar also hath raked together many latter Writers upon this Booke of his owne order But of ours not a few Divines of excellent learning Protestant Interpreters of the Revelation have in the foregoing age put their hands to this Prophesie among whom notwithstanding in my judgement Henry Bullinger of Helvetia is most eminent whom almost all do follow as David Chytraeus Alfonsus Cunradus Franciscus Lambertus Sebastianus Meyerus Nicolaus Collado Johannes Foxus Benedictus Aretius Matthias Illyricus Augustinus Marloratus Petrus Artopoeus Franciscus Iunius Daniel Tossanus And of late in this our age Iohn Napier a Scotchman Thomas Brightman an Englishman Raphaël Eglinus Conradus Graserus a Germane Iohannes Piscator Matthias Hoë Matthias Cotterius a French man with others whom I have not seene But thou wilt say to what end are all these named To wit to shew what I purposed that nothing of the authority of this Booke is hereby diminished because as hath bin objected some worthy Divines have abstained from interpreting the same Touching the manner of interpretation which every of them hath followed and whether being so many they have effected what they desired and ought to have done would be too long to explicate neither is it to the purpose in hand This one thing perhaps may be affirmed without injurie to any of them all that to this Booke hath happened what the Evangelist Marke writeth of the woman diseased with an issue of blood Mar. 5.26 that shee had suffered many things of the Physitians and it availed her nothing but she became much worse perhaps not so much by reason of the Physitians unskilfullnesse as the incurablenesse of the disease namely the healing thereof being reserved for to illustrate the glory of Christ For while so many every one following the force and reason of his own wit have uttered such various things touching these aenigmaticall Visions piously indeed as I suppose yet little cohering with themselves or with the scope or meaning of the Holy Ghost it is come to passe that indeed there are extant an heap of Commentaries upon this Booke every of which promiseth a new light unto the Prophesie The different manner of interpreting whereas the obscurity thereof is not onely not lessened thereby but in some places also more darkened For some applie the Aenigmaes of the Revelation unto the History of the Ancient Church Others diversly unto the continued period of the New Church Others in every particular have imagined unto themselves mysticall meanings thinking as the saying is that under every stone gold lay hid Others turned all things into tropes and morall Allegories Others have laboured prophetically to praesage and find out future things even more then was lawfull for men to know yea hardly among so many which commonly is said of Chronicles thou shalt find two or three agree which disagreement verily argues that the difficultie of the Booke is not yet by so great variety of Authours wholly taken away but rather encreased not so much by a blame-worthy ignorance of Interpreters as in regard of the incomprehensible wisdome of the Prophesie it selfe the full revelation whereof is undoubtedly reserved unto the manifestation of Christ our Lord. Notwithstanding I write not these things touching Interpreters as if I would detract any thing from the labours of so many learned men or thought that by their labour nothing of these mysteries were brought to light or explicated and that I at length in all these Aenigmaes had as the saying is hit the naile on the head Far be it for I doubt not in the least but that a great part of these Types by foregoing and present events are so manifestly brought to light that the trueth of them may daily bee seene and felt of such who as the Holy Ghost requireth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have understanding Yea I ingeniously professe that I have bin very much helped by the Commentaries of most of them especially Bullingers and Brightmans Now what I further judge touching the whole form method and manner of interpreting the Revelation I will by and by shew CHAPTER V. Of the dignity time profit and scope of this Prophesie I Have spoken of the Authour and authority of the obscurity
other on a Camel which two are the Angels that in the Revelation denounce the ruine of Babylon before whose feet Iohn fell downe to worship and other strange mysteries which he having first found out doth now flatteringly applie to the Pope being lift up with incredible joy if not madnesse and folly or to say truely with blasphemous impiety and sacrilegious boldnesse I know not whither thou hast seen D. N. I suppose you have seene and read him forasmuch as hee adorneth Commentaries on that prophesie It s the worke of a Spanish Divine of Granata fairly printed at Antwerp An. 1614. the Author also being an eloquent Interpreter of his owne mind and sense One thing I know that of mad men he will make them more mad by his glozing Exposition of Aenigmaes such flatterers are the Iesuites of their Antichrist being void of truth full of deceit and wanting no words The sum is a two-fold warre of the primitive Church the first against Iudaisme in the two first Chapters the other against Paganisme in the eight following the Citie and world being converted to the Faith of Christ and hence a four-fold Hallelujah Lastly a long during peace to the Church Antichrist being to bee overcome under the names of Gog and Magog and in the last place the most glorious triumph of the Romane Church in the Heavens at the day of Iudgement a worthy cover to the pot March 10. 1615. Yours to command N. N. Behold a lively Idea of the Inquirie the which being communicated unto me by a friend I thought good here to rehearse it least happily the beautifulnesse of the new worke might deceive any one For he coyneth new Oracles hence I call him an upstart his worke otherwise being of much labour and more then vulgar wit and not unpolished which I could wish the Author had more rightly placed Enough both of the true and the false Argument of the Apocalyps Wee come to the Parts CHAPTER VII Touching the parts of the Revelation THe Booke ordinarily is variously divided I shall not much differ from the common partition but distribute the same into a Preface Prophesie or Visions and a Conclusion I. The Preface containes the Title and Dedication of the Booke Chapter 1. unto verse 9. II. The Prophesie I distinguish into seven Visions clearly enough and distinctly shewed by Christ unto Iohn in the Spirit in the I le Patmos from thence unto ver 6. of Chap. 22. But those that suppose and urge that the Booke consists of one continued Vision do wholly stray from the Scope and in vaine wearie the Reader as I shall shew by and by The first Vision is of Christ gloriously walking among the seven golden Candlestickes and commanding John to write certaine Commandements unto the seven Churches of Asia and also the following Visions for the perpetuall doctrine instruction and consolation of the Faithfull from ver 9. Chap. 1.2.3 This Vision is not propheticall of future things as the six following but wholly doctrinall confirming Iohn in the function of teaching and commending his Apostolicall authority unto the seven Churches of Asia The second is touching Gods majesty sitting in the Throne and of the Lamb standing in the Throne and of the Booke sealed with seven Seales and of the opening of the Seale and of the Book by the Lamb and diverse wonders thence proceeding Chap. 4.5.6.7 The third is of the seven Trumpets of the Angels and wonderfull apparitions following thereupon Chap. 8.9.10.11 The fourth is of the woman in travell of a Man-Child and of the Dragon persecuting the Man-Child and woman of the womans flight into the wildernesse and of the rage of the two Beasts against the Saints Chap. 12.13.14 The fift is of the seven Angels pouring forth the Seven Vials of the last plagues upon the adversaries and throne of the Beast Chap. 15.16 The sixt is of the Iudgement of the great whore and ruine of Babylon and of the casting of the Beast and False-prophet with all his followers into the Lake of fire and brimstone Chap. 17.18.19 The seventh and last is of the binding and loosing of the Dragon at the end of a thousand yeers and lastly of the Iudgement of the Divell Death Hell and all reprobates that were not written in the Booke of Life and of the figure and glorious state of the Heavenly Ierusalem Chap. 20.21.22 unto ver 6. III. The conclusion of the Booke commends the profitablenesse of the Prophesie and by an Anathema establisheth the divine authority thereof from verse 6. unto the end CHAPTER VIII Touching the Forme of the Revelation THe things hitherto praemised have beene treated of by many Interpreters That which remaines touching the forme and method of the Revelation hath as yet beene observed but by few nay to speake it with modesty I scarcely find the same explicated by any one The forme indeed seemes to be Epistolarie having an Epistolarie Inscription and Subscription and is shut up with an Epistolarie wish common to the Apostles all the Acts also of the first Vision are Epistle-wise But that which beginneth at the fourth Chapter which is the first propheticall Vision and the following unto the end if you well observe them have plainly a Dramaticall forme The Apocalyps a prophetical interlude hence the Revelation may truely be called a Propheticall Drama show or representation For as in humane Tragedies diverse persons one after another come upon the Theater to represent things done and so again depart diverse Chores also or Companies of Musitians and Harpers distinguish the diversity of the Acts and while the Actors hold up do with musicall accord sweeten the wearinesse of the Spectators and keepe them in attention so verily the thing it selfe speaketh that in this Heavenly Interlude by diverse shewes and apparitions are represented diverse or rather as we shall see the same things touching the Church not past but to come and that their diverse Acts are renewed by diverse Chores or Companies one while of 24. Elders and four Beast another while of Angels sometimes of Sealed ones in their foreheads and sometimes of Harpers c. with new Songs and worthy Hymmes not so much to lessen the wearisomnesse of the Spectators as to infuse holy meditations into the mindes of the Readers and to lift them up to Heavenly matters The which thing not having been hitherto observed by most Interpreters they have wondred what was meant by so many Songs Hymmes and change of Angels and Personages renewed in diverse Visions and what by the often iterated Representations of the Beast Babylon and the last judgement which caused them to seeke and imagine Anticipations Recapitulations and unnecessary Mysteries in those things which either served onely to the Dramaticall decorum or else had a manifest respect to the method of the Visions concerning which I will speak by and by What Origen therefore wrote touching the SONG OF SONGS In Prologo Cant. Homil. 1. that it seemed to him Solomon wrote a
fire and on the contrary the Churches Victory and Eternall Glory The particular Visions are finished with the two latter Acts The two Acts of the particular Visions because they onely represent Antichrists tragedie rage declining and destruction the which notwithstanding the former touching the seven Vials doth more briefly the later touching the whore riding on the Beast more largely and clearly therefore this also is to be distinguished into foure Acts yet answering to the two latter Acts of the universall Visions Now although the Parallell-Acts both former and latter are not alwayes divided by whole Chapters like as Tragedie-writers use to doe but sometimes are joyned together and as it were mingled in the same Chapters because they shadow out Histories or things by the same periods and walking as the saying is with equall steps yet every where if thou well observe the Method they have traces evident enough as wee have diligently shewed in every of the Visions where also wee have noted the Markes and Periods of every of them CHAPTER XI The manner of interpreting observed by PAREUS FVrthermore by the things hitherto spoken touching the Argument and Method the manner of interpreting observed by us will not be obscure To every vision wee have praefixed its proper dispensation or order with as much brevity and light as could be the Chapters we have illustrated with Arguments Parts and Analysis The Doctrines which in this Prophesie are many and excellent we have so laboured to expound and applie unto the Scope of divine Scriptures shewed by the Apostle Rom. 15.4 2. Tim. 3.16 being profitable for reproofe for correction for instruction in righteousnesse and lastly for the patience comfort and hope of the Saints that this Booke may with no great labour profitablie be propounded unto the Churches by the Ministers of Gods word Now seeing in the beginning I said that the eternall Deity of Christ is thorowout in this Prophesie proved with such evident Arguments against Heretickes as scarcely any other Scripture doth it more clearely I thought it worth the labour to note above XL. Arguments of that nature in their severall places vindicating them from the depravings of Eniedinus the Transsilvanian Hereticke which he cals Explications that it might so much the more appeare that those Ancients who as Eusebius recordeth denyed the Canonicall Authority of this Book as not written by the Apostle John but the Hereticke Cerinthus Lib. 7. hist cap. 25. did either not looke into the Booke and so sinned through grosse ignorance or else were carried away with more then humane affection What Method I have taken in explicating Propheticall things hath already been said and the Praefaces of the Visions shall shew in which I have not onely laboured to declare the Argument Scope Coherence Order and Period of every one but in speciall clearly to shew the Harmonie and consent of the foregoing and following Types and of the darker and more clear each with other and with the Types and Phrases of the ancient Prophets that so I might illustrate the Revelation by the Revelation It is most safe to expound the Revelation by the Revelation which manner of interpreting cannot bee but most safe and certaine For seeing it is evident that the darker Types go before and the clearer follow after and are notwithstanding Analogicall or agreeing with each other undoubtedly the more darke must bee sought out by the clearer Now the more cleare have no extraordinary difficult application unto the things signified by them And therefore wee may thence with some labour draw the understanding of the darker which also I have laboured to doe In summe following Austines advice I have shewed these two things that the same things are so many wayes repeated in this Booke as it may seeme to speake of different things whereas we shall finde that the same things are diversly related And that a few yea not a few but many things are in the Booke Aug. lib. 20. de C. D. cap. 17. by the manifestation whereof the rest might with labour be found out which again I say not as if I thought that all the mysteries of the Revelation were by me unfolded Far be it I come short in many things Throughout where I sticke and where bounds seeme to be set Eph. 4.7 there I ingenuously professe a man must stand and goe no further For here is wisedome 2. Cor. 12.8 To them that earnestly call upon God the Spirit is given according to the measure of the gift of Christ. It befell even the Apostle Paul that he obtained not the thing hee petioned of God How much more may the same befall us and me the least of all especially in these things of which the Lord hath as yet reserved much in his owne power Wherefore to interpret the Revelation What it is to interpret the Revelation is not to untie all the knots of Aenigmaes to leave unsifted or be ignorant of nothing at all in the same or by precisely interpreting the meaning of the Image Character number of the Beasts name the Beast himselfe the woman on the Beast the eating of her flesh the seven the ten Kings that shall burne her Gog and Magog to make all gain-sayers to bee silent For who hath ever attained unto this by interpretation or commenting on any part of Holy Writ They therefore that require the same are wiser then Christ the Apostles and God himselfe And on the contrary such are wise against God who make a mocke of the Oracles they understand not because of their obscurity or because of the diversity of Interpreters Many types of future things remaine secret and are known to God onely untill they be fulfilled The whole fourth Act with its accomplishment is secret because the seventh Trumpet hath not yet sounded neither is the seventh Viall yet poured forth into the Ayre A great part also of the third Act is reserved unto posteritie which in time shall see the full gathering together of the Kings of the Earth into Harmageddon the devouring and burning of the whorish woman the desolation of Babylon and the event of the Goggish Warre c. The beginning we see and further shall see In the two former Acts and the better part of the third the accomplishment whereof hitherto Histories and dayly experience do so plainly shew that if we held our peace the very stones would cry out it is the part of a Faithfull Interpreter not to draw the Readers from the scope neither to send them from those things which are done at home before their eyes to seek for Chymeras in the Hyperborean Mountaines which thing almost all the Iesuiticall brethren at this day do in their Commentaries least happily Antichrist should bee found in the Mountaines of Rome for the discovery of whom the greater part of the Apocalyps was of old revealed and circumscribed with such apparent oracles that after the Historie and experience of so many Ages we may
justly question whither it were greater blindnesse in the Jews not to beleeve in Christ then for these to deny the Pope of Rome to be Antichrist Wherefore I shall seeme to have performed my function sufficiently not if I discusse all the obscurities of mysteries so irresutably that all do applaude mee but if so farre as God hath enabled me by the helpe of my Method laid down I shall congruously perspicuously and without deceit according to scope and experience explicate both the other Aenigmaes of this Prophesie and especially that part which containes the amplification and Catastrophe of the Combats of the Church and properly respects these last times Now by doing hereof if I have not kindled a Torch to take off the darkenesse with which it seemes to be covered yet verily I have laboured and if I be not deceived have lighted a Candle by the light and guidance whereof as by Ariadne her threed other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Godly Divines shall after me dive more deeply into these hidden mysteries and more neerly point at that Son of perdition sitting in the Temple of God as god and exalting himselfe above all that is worshipped shewing himselfe that hee is God And they shall say This is he O Romanist beware of him AMEN THE APPARITIONS AND PERSONS MAKING UP THIS PROPHETICAL DRAMA REVEALED IN SEVEN VISIONS In Vision I. Chapters 1.2.3 IOHN THE EVANGELIST Actor and interlocutor throughout Christ in a glorious form walking amongst the seven Candlestickes The authour of the Revelation and maker of the prologue In Vision II. Chapt. 4.5.6.7 The majesty of God sitting on the throne The first Chore of the foure and twenty Elders The 2. Chore of the foure Beasts The Book sealed with seven Seales in the hand of the sitter on the throne A strong Angell desiring the booke to be opened The Lambe as it were slaine opening the booke The 3. Chore of Angels The 4. Chore of all creatures A white horse with his Rider comming forth out of the first Seale A red horse and his Rider out of the second Seale A blacke horse and his Rider out of the third Seale A pale horse with death on him hell following him out of the fourth Seale The soules of the Martyrs under the Altar in the fift Seale A great Earth-quake out of the sixt Seale Four Angels holding the foure winds that they should not blow An Angell from the East with the Seale of God The multitude of Sealed ones and Martyrs In Vision III. Chapt. 8.9.10.11 Seven Angels with seven trumpets out of the seventh Seale An Angell with a golden censer at the Altar An Angell sounding the first trumpet An Angell sounding the second trumpet An Angell sounding the third trumpet An Angell sounding the fourth trumpet An Angell sounding the fift trumpet Locusts comming up out of the bottomlesse pit into the earth An Angell sounding the sixt trumpet Four Angels bound and loosed at Euphrates A strong Angell cloathed with a cloud and having a Book in his hand Iohn eating up the Booke and measuring the temple with a reed The two witnesses prophesying The Beast out of the pit killing the witnesses An Earth-quake overthrowing a tenth part of Babylon An Angell sounding the seventh trumpet The first Chore of the foure and twenty Elders In Vision IV. Chapt. 12.13.14 A woman clothed with the Sunne bringing forth a Man-child flying into the Wildernesse The son of the woman taken up into Heaven The red Dragon persecuting the woman Michael fighting for the woman against the Dragon The fift uneertaine Chore. The seven-headed Beast ascending out of the sea The two-horned Beast ascending out of the earth The Image of the Sea-beast A company of Sealed-ones standing with the Lambe on the Mountaine A sixt Chore of Harpers An Angell flying with the everlasting Gospell An Angell publishing the ruine of Babylon An Angell denouncing punishments to the worshippers of the Beast Christ on the cloud with a sharpe sickle An Angell proclaiming the last harvest and vintage In Vision V. Chapt. 15.16 The seven Angels with seven Vials The sixt Chore of Harpers upon the sea of Glasse An Angell pouring forth the 1. Viall on the Earth An Angell pouring forth the 2. Viall on the Sea An Angell pouring forth the 3. Viall on the Rivers and Fountaines An Angell pouring forth the 4. Viall on the Sunne An Angell pouring forth the 5. Viall on the throne of the Beast An Angell pouring forth the 6. Viall on Euphrates Three unclean Spirits like frogs out of the mouth of the Beast c. An Angell pouring forth the 7. Viall into the aire The rupture of Babylon by an Earth-quake In Vision VI. Chapt. 17.18.19 The whore riding on the seven-headed Beast The seven-headed Beast with his description The ten Kings waging war with the Lamb afterward burning the whore An Angell publishing the fall of Babylon An uncertain voyce calling the Godly out of Babylon Kings Merchants Sea-men bewailing the ruine of Babylon An Angell casting a milstone into the sea A fift uncertaine Chore. The first Chore of the 24. Elders and the second Chore of the 4. Beasts Iohn intending to worship the angell Christ with an heavenly armie rushing upon the Beast and the Kings of the Earth An Angell standing in the sun calling the birds unto the prey The judgement of the Beast False-Prophet Kings of the earth and worshippers of the Beast In Vision VII Chapt. 20.21.22 An Angell with the key of the bottomlesse Pit and a great Chayne The old serpent bound a thousand yeers The martyrs and conquerours of the beast reigning with Christ a thousand yeeres Satan let loose seducing the Nations and raising Gog and Magog against the Holy Citie The casting of Satan into the Lake of fire The raising of the dead and the last judgement The new Ierusalem coming down from Heaven the Bride of the Lambe God in the throne publishing the judgement Iohn seeing all these things and intending to worship the angell The Conclusion the Lord Iesus putting an end to the Drama A TABLE OF THE Principall QUESTIONS which are expounded in this COMMENTARIE In the Preface 1. OF the Authour of the Revelation Page 5. 2. Of the Canonicall authority of the Revelation Page 8. 3. Of the obscurity of the Book what it is and whence with the remedies thereof Page 9. 4. Of the Interpreters of the Revelation both Ancient and Modern and of the manner of interpreting observed by them Page 11. 5. Of the dignity time profit and scope of this Prophesie Page 13. 6. Of the argument of the Book Page 16. 7. Of the Partition of the Revelation Page 19. 8. Of the form of the Revelation ibid. 9. Of the generall Method of the Revelation Page 20. 10. Of the speciall Method of the Revelation Page 26. 11. Of the manner of interpretation observed by Pareus Page 27. In Chapter I. 12. Of the word Apocalyps Pag. 3. 13. A disputation about the words from him which is which was and
example of their monastical ignorance the author tells us a monasticall exposition upon the word Apocalyps that the word apocalyps is compounded of apo re and clipsor velare O the miserable barbarisme of that age attempting to unfold these high mysteries and in the mean time ignorant of the very name of the title The verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifyes to reveal a secret from which commeth apocalypsis a revelation of a secret such as are all future things For it is not man but God who foreseeth and revealeth things to come But the events which were to befall the Church under the new Testament were hidde both from Iohn and us but are revealed in this booke and therefore it is rightly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to which wee may ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a revelation of things to come Afterward it is sometimes called a prophefie from the argument of it which is a prediction of future things revealed by God And the title answereth to the title of the ancient prophets as the vision of Isaiah the vision of Obadiah the prophesie of Niniveh which Naum saw the prophesie which Habacucsaw the word of t●e Lord that came to Hosea to Joel to Micah c. so that it sheweth the divine authoritie of the booke For to reveal things to come is from God onely so that this booke being a revelation is inspired of God which argument Iohn afterwards doth more fully confirme For as Ierom wel observeth this mystical booke is intituled a revelation to give us to understand that we have need of the knowledge and explanation of it that wee may say with the prophet open my eyes and I will consider the marveillous things of thy law Psal 119.18 Of Jesus Christ that is which Christ revealed unto Iohn ● argument of the deity of Christ So that Christ is the author of the revelation which is the first argument to proove the God-head of Christ in this booke For God by the prophet doth assume it as a thing peculiar to himself to reveal secrets Isai 42 9 41 23 Behold the former things are come to passe and new things doe I declare before they spring forth I will tell you of them and confounds by this argument all Idols that they are no Gods because they are ignorant of future things But the words following which God gave unto him seem to weaken the argument For to whom God doth reveal things to come hee is not God but God hath revealed these things to Christ therefore Christ is not God The answer is twofold first the whole may bee granted if it bee taken in a good sence as namely that Christ albeit he is true God yet wherein God his father hath revealed these things to him that is according to his humanitie hee is not God For the humanitie of Christ not foreknowing things to come but by revelation is not God but the man Christ Iesus is God because by his divinitie hee fore knoweth all things of himself Secondly the assumption is not in the text and may bee denyed for Iohn saith not that God revealed these things to Christ but gave this revelation to him as to our mediator that hee might reveal the same to us his servants for it is his proper office to reveal the will of the father to the Church So that 〈◊〉 speaketh of the office of Christ as hee is our mediator which doth not 〈◊〉 the ●qualitie of the son with the father but supposeth it because as he was meere man or a creature of what power soever hee could not have performed the workes of a mediator But it behooued him also to bee God But Thirdly there follows no absurditie to understand it as spoken of the Godhead of Christ for such as is the order of existence such also is the manner of working betwixt the father and the sonn For as the somexisteth not of himself but as hee is the first begotten of the father so the so● revealeth things to come not of himself but as hee receiveth from the father and as the father Giveth unto the son his Essence so is also his divine wildome communicated unto him from the father by Eternall Generation Lyra and others understand God in this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Essentially of the whole trinitie and taking it in that sence then the revelation is given to Christ by God as unto a mediator onely but understanding it of the person of the father then God is said to give it unto Christ both as to the sonn and mediator also To shew unto his servants the end that God Gave the revelation to Christ was not that hee should have it for himself But as being the messenger of the father to reveal it to his servants By servants is meant Iohn with the pastors and teachers yea all the faithfull of all ages to all which the mysteries of this booke were to bee revealed by Christ First to Iohn that hee should write it and then to all the rest both to read and understand it meditate teach explain it to the Church of God The Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his noteth the servants of Christ for it cohereth with the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to shew which noteth the office of Christ and not of God So that Christ sheweth this revelation 2 argument of Ch. deity to his owne servants which is a second argument proving the Godhead of Christ For hee certainly is the Lord of the Church yea God Eternal to whom Iohn the teachers and all the faithfull of the Church are servants for God alone is the Lord of the Church according to that of the psalmist Iehovah our Lord c. Psal 8.10 For albeit Christ in that hee is our mediator is exalted to bee head and Lord of the Church notwithstanding except hee had been God hee could neither have been mediator or Lord of the Church So that we plainly see that Christ Jesus is God seeing John and all the faithfull are his servants Which must shortly come to passe this noteth the subject of the booke which containes an historie of things not allready past but of things to come afterward both to the Church and enemies thereof Must come to passe not by a fatall or absolute necessitie 1. Cor. 11.19 but hypothetically or supposedly according to that of the Apostle scandalls and heresies must come Besides God hath so decreed it whose counsell is unchangeable and therefore the events must happen according to the same as also because of secondarie causes as the malice of satan the rage of the enemies against the Church which though they bee changeable in themselves yet they are not changed so that if accidental events bee not altered by the counsell of God and secondarie causes they necessarily come to passe though the contingencie bee not taken away Shortly but how shortly seeing after so many ages they are not as yet come to passe and
make manifest for Iohn being banished in the ●le of Patmos began alreadie to feel the fury of Domitian And here the dream of such is refuted who binde the fulfilling of this prophesie to the last three years before the end of the world 4 Iohn to the seven Churches Those things being forespoken of which served to gain autority attention to this booke John dedicates the revelation to the sevē Churches of Asia wishing Grace and peace unto them By seven Andreas understandeth all the Churches Because in scripture the number seven is a number of perfection but because the seven Churches in Asia are as it were nominated by a marke to be knowen therefore I understand that it was purposely dedicated unto them not that the revelation belongeth not to others but because the first vision doth directly concerne them the rest generally belongs to the whole Church Of Asia He speaketh of Asia the lesser or that part of Asia Ptolo. lib. 5 geogra cap. 2. which is invironed from the East with both countries of Armenia from the west with the Aegean sea from the North with the Euxine sea from the south with the Mediteranian sea Here Iohn had planted seven Churches of note whereof that of Ephesus was the greatest but after he was banished the teachers carelesly performing their office he is commanded in the first vision to reprove admonish them of their duty Grace to you and peace be or be multiplied as in 1 Pet. 1 2 by a familiar salutation he seekes to gaine the good will of those whom he was afterwards more sharply to admonish The Apostolical salutation hath beene opened in the Epistle to the Romans and Corinthians Grace is that free favor of God from which doth flow all the mercies of God and every good thing which we enjoy The Glosse doth wel understand it of the free forgivenes of sins Peace the effect of Grace is the tranquillity and joy of the conscience Rom. 1.2 of which the Apostle speaketh being justified by faith we have peace with God The Hebrews by the word peace understand all maner of prosperitie and hence the Apostles in the beginning all most of all their Epistles doe not with out cause wish the same unto the faithful Which is and which was and which is to come It is manifest that this is a paraphrase of the name of God who alone is the author and giver of Grace peace But others do interpret it otherwise Some of the father alone from whom the Apostles generally desire grace to the Churches Rom. 1.7 Grace and peace be to you from God our father he is called which IS because he is from none but the beginning of the deity is from him And which was because he was before all time in eternitie And which is to come Iohn 5.12 because he wil come to judge the world by the son that the father is said to judge no man is to be referred to the immediate judgement For the father hath not so given over the judgement to the son as not to keepe the power of judging stil in his owne hand Others refer all to the person of the son For he is he which is because Christ is the same God with the father which was because the word was in the beginning and which is to come because he will come in the clouds to judgement vers 7. Others will have the three persons to be noted by three differences of time attributing the severall times to the severall persons that is which is to the father which was to the son and that which is to come to the holy Ghost his coming in to the Church by proceeding from the father the son so Andreas grace be to you peace from the Godhead which subsisteth in three persons To be short others thinke that God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 essentially described and doe apply all the words to every one of the persons for the father is he which is which was and which is to come so is the son and so is the holy Ghost What then all these expositions were right and godly if Iohn in these words had ended his prayer but he addeth and from the seven spirits and from Iesus Christ by which hee declareth that he directeth his prayer in the behalfe of the Churches to the holy Trinitie But not indeed in words commonly used yet such as are convenient to his purpose for the stile of this prophesie hath many things proper and excellent fitted to the argument of visions which not being observed by some interpreters they vainly wearie themselves and go astray For seldom the name of God or of the father or of the son or of the holy Ghost is found in the revelation in expresse words But John speaking of God useth for the most part propheticall descriptions Therefore this prayer is set downe in words agreeing to the excellent proprieties of this prophesie and in stead of the ordinarie forme of salutations used of the Apostles Rom. 1.7 as grace and peace to you from God our father and from the Lord Iesus Christ or the grace of the Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Iohn useth this kind as more proper and secret Grace and peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven spirits and from Iesus Christ c. in which words the true God three in persons one in essence is described as the divine attribute and prayer of the Apostle doe plainly manifest Now I come to the particulars From him which is Thus he describeth the person of the father by attributes proper to the divine essence yet common to every one of the persons Hereupon Christ assumes the same to himself vers 7. which is a most evident argument of his divinity And it is a description of eternity including and exceeding the three differences of the time present past and to come that is from him which is was and shall bee the words which is to come being put for shall be as in that of John 16 13. He will shew you things to come Act. 18 21. that is things that shall be so I must keepe the feast that cometh in Jerusalem And it seemeth that he altogether intended here to expresse that name of God in Exodus Exod. 3.14 EHIEH I wil be from which cometh the name Jehovah in which word as Vatablus wel observeth the Hebrewes take notice of those three differences of time It serveth for the great comfort of the Church in that he prayeth for grace peace not simply from God the father but from him which is which was and which is to come who alwayes remaineth the same and with whom is no variablenes Iam. 1 17. nor shadow of turning Indeed in the world the Church hath experience of diverse changes but in God alone she findeth constant
of Gods providence namely his vertue charity justice wisdom patience threatnings and wrath Which is a mysterie bringing along with it an inconvenience which he desireth to avoid for he makes question whither sound divinitie wil admit that grace and peace be asked from the seven vertues rather then from the seven created angels yea how grace and peace can be prayed for from menacings and wrath so he And from Jesus Christ In that he wisheth grace and peace from Christ in the the third and last place is neither against the former exposition nor any way derogateth from the dignity of Christ for as the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.14 doth not derogate from the order of the persons in the trinitie though he put Christ in the first place so here our Apostle for waighty causes sets downe the holy Ghost before Christ because he treateth of him not simply as being the son of God but also as he is the mediatour redeemer and revealer of this prophesie Notwithstanding great reason it is that he should pray for grace and peace from Christ Ephes 2.14 because it cometh by him Iohn 1.17 and he is our peace Who is the faithfull witnesse The following titles are so many reasons wherefore grace and peace is prayed for from Christ and they set forth as hath been shewed in the analysis both his threefold office with the benefit thereof as also declare his eternall Godhead The first title respects his propheticall office that faithfull witnesse which seemeth to be taken from Psal 89.38 witnesse because he hath brought forth out of the bosome of his father the testimonie that is the glad tydings of the redemption of man through his death and from heaven hath opened to us the true knowledge of God and way of salvation faithfull Because he not onely confirmed the heavenly truth by preaching by miracles meekly calling of sinners to repentance to the faith of the Gospel but also sealed the same by suffering on the crosse and by instituting the ministry he gave to the churches Apostles prophets Evangelists Pastors and Teachers who perpetually should be his witnesses Eph. 4.12 preach the Gospell to after ages for the perfecting of the saincts for the edifying of the body of Christ according to these scriptures Ioh. 17 6. I have manifested thy name to the men thou gavest me out of the world and 18 37. For this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnes unto the truth Io. 1.18 the son which is in the bosome of the father he hath revealed God unto us Who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession The father and holy Ghost are also said to be witnesses 1. Io. 5.7 Ioh. 5.37 there are three that bear record in heaven the father the word and the holy Ghost The father saith Christ himself hath borne witnes of me And of the holy Ghost he saith when the comforter is come c. He shall testifie of mee the Apostles are called witnesses Act. 1.18 And Antipas Rev 2.12 and two witnesses are mentioned called Martyrs for sheadding of their blood for the testimonie of Christ Revel 11.3 But Christ onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of prerogative is called that faithfull witnesse because he first brought with him the witnesse of the truth downe from heaven he first and he onely hath shead his blood for his owne testimonie whereas all other martyrs suffered not for their owne but for the testimonie of Jesus Christ Yea also the witnesse which the father and the holy Ghost gave of him was declared by himself and therefore Christ as by a speciall and proper right is called the faithfull witnes that is the true and constant revealer of the doctrine of our salvation whoever therefore hearkens not to him Deuteron 18.19 can not be saved but who so heareth him shall have life eternall This also confirmeth the authoritie of the revelation because it was revealed to John by Jesus Christ that faithfull witnesse who can notly nor deceive therefore this booke is trulie divine and we may safely trust and beleeve all things contained in it It serveth also to instruct us that if Christ onely be the true witnesse then those are not to be heard but avoyded as Liars which teach the Church such things as dissent from the testimonie of Christ It may also comfort us because Christ the faithfull witnesse will not forsake them who suffer for the cause of his truth but will at length reward them faithfully according to his promise The first begotten of the dead This title concernes Christ his priestly office who died for our sins and was raised again for our justification Rom. 4.25 For the word dead shewes that he died and being the first begotten of the dead it teacheth us that he was raysed from the dead And the whole scripture testifies that the end and use of his death and resurrection was not a bare witnesse as Socinus blasphemeth but chiefly a propitiation to purge us from our sins and to justifie us before God Paul calleth him likewise the first begotten of the dead 1 Collo 1.18 1 Corinth 15.20 and sheweth that Christ is become the first fruits of them that sleep But how can Christ be the first fruits of the dead seeing the scriptures testifie that Elias and Elisha raysed up two persons from the dead before the time of Christs manifestation in the flesh Lazarus also with the widows son and Centurions servant were restored from death to life Answer First Christ is the first begotten or first fruites of the dead because he was the first that raysed up himself from the dead by his owne power whereas all before Christ were raysed not by their owne power but Christs alone Secondly Christ was raysed up to an immortall life not to dy any more but the other to an earthly life and became subject to death again He is said to be the first begotten or the first that did rise again Matt. 19.28 Act. 13.13 Rom. 1 4. because the resurrection is a kinde of new birth and so Christ calleth the last resurrection a regeneration And Paul applieth that in Psal 2. of the father eternally begetting the son to his resurrection from the dead and hence he is declared to be the eternall and omnipotent son of God This should greatly comfort us that though we are borne and brought forth in a corruptible condition yet when we rise again we shall be regenerated unto a state incorruptible even while we are in this life we are regenerated but it is spiritually onely and in part but when we shall by the spirit of God be restored to eternall life then we shall be regenerated both corporally and fully to wit when our mortall bodies shall be made conformable to the glorious body of Christ let us not fear therefore though we should suffer death for the testimony of Christ because he who is the first begotten of the dead
are the angels of the seven churches and the seven candlesticks which thou sawest are the seven churches I Iohn who am also your brother and companion in tribulation Hitherto wee have treated of the preface now followeth the preparation to the vision Lib. 7 hist cap. 20. with the vision it self I Iohn Dionysius Alexandrinus as Eusebius witnesseth draweth hence a reason for to weaken the authority of this booke as if the author were excessive in publishing of his owne praise for saith he the Prophets Apostles used not to mention so oftē their owne names as Iohn doth in this booke saying many times J Iohn as if he had been writing not a booke but an obligation or acquittance But Iohn herein doth nothing more then what is very seemly yea necessary Five times indeed he names himself in this booke which wil not seeme strange if wee minde that it is one thing to write a historie another thing to write a prophesie The truth of an historie requireth not the authority of the writer but so doth a prophesie Therefore we read that the old prophets as Jeremie Daniel and others did usually prefix their names to their prophecies whose example Iohn seemeth here to imitate Yea Paul himself expresseth sometime his name in his Epistles I Paul with my owne hand c. And touching the repetition of his name here it was very necessarie For otherwise it might have been thought that Christ who before called himself Alpha and Omega had also spoken the words following I am your brother c. therefore his name is seasonably inserted I John who am your brother c. by which epithites hee seekes to win their good wil also comforteth the Churches to whom he writeth Your brother Not by blood but by faith and in the communion of Christ for there is betwixt the members of Christ a spirituall brotherhood straightly tying them together in the bond of love he calleth himself their companion in three respects because they who are the members of one head must mutually partake together in all conditions First in affliction for even then the Christians were grievously persecuted under Domitian and Iohn himself banished into Patmos Secondly in the kingdom that is a spirituall kingdom For we being made kings and priests to God do now with Christ our Lord maintain the same against all enemies and in the end shall fully injoy it with him in the heavens by this fellowship Iohn the beloved disciple doth not a little rayse up the spirits of Christs afflicted ones because he requireth constancy no otherwise of them but as he himself desired to be a companion with them in their common sufferings yea assureth them that after their afflictions they shall enjoy an everlasting kingdom Thirdly he was their companion in the patience of Jesus Christ or sufferance as the word importeth shewing that in the kingdom to come we shall not suffer but reigne according to that of Paul 2 Timoth. 2 Timoth. 2 12. 2 12. To which purpose is that saying of Tertullian we triumph being overcome being slaine we conquer when we are kept downe we escape howbeit we are no otherwise esteemed then malefactors and worthy to be burnt c. Of Iesus Christ this may be referred as wel to the afflictions kingdom as to the patience or suffrance of Christ which is very comfortable to the Godly for herein the Apostle giveth us to understand that not onely hee but even Christ himself also doth partake with us in our troubles and as the kingdome is Christs so also is our affliction and our suffrance Thus is he afflicted and suffereth with us that wee also might reigne with him I was in the I le that is called Patmos He sheweth where he saw and wrote the Revelation which addes authoritie to the history Patmos is an Island in the sea Aigeum in circuit 30 miles as Plinie writeth For what cause Lib. 4 chap. 12. Lib. 3 hist cap. 14. and in what condition he was being there he mentioneth not Euschius Hier●m and others say that he was banished thither in the fourteenth year of Domiti●● ●●d there he received this revelation from Christ Tertullian addeth that he was apprehended at Ephesus by the governor of Asia Lib. de prescript and sent to Rome where he was boyled in oyle but receiving no hurt afterwards was banished into this Island It is further reported that Domitian did cast him into a caldron of boyling oyle in way of scorne because he had heard that the Christians tooke their name from Christ that is the anointed Domitian being slain his acts for their cruelty recalled by the Senate Iohn under the Emperor Nerva returned from his banishment to Ephesus and ministred to the seven Churches in Asia to whom he wrote the first vision Epiphanius recordeth that John was in Patmos in the dayes of Clandius Cesar But it is a manifest error Claudius being put for Domitian as the computation of the time sheweth For the word of God He closely notes the cause of his banishment least it might bee scandalous and taken as if he had been there as a malefactor for not the punishment but the cause maketh a martyr whereas it was for his constant profession of the doctrine of Christ which the Romans would neither suffer in their city or other territories which caused the first great persecution against the Christians under Nero and the second under Domitian at which time many thousands of them laid downe their lives for the cause of Christ For the word of God and the testimonie of Iesus Christ Both are joyned as here so in vers 2. By the word hee understandeth the son the essentiall word of God Ioh. 1.1 By the testimonie he meaneth the doctrine of Christ Thus by banishments and sufferings the primitive Christians did triumph over their enemies though scandalised as fooles and Galileans by the men of this world and esteemed worthy of nothing but whipping torturing and hanging therefore saith Turtullian that which the enemies chalenge over us is our joy who had rather be candemned then forsake God this is the Palme of our clothing This is the Chariot of our triumph and the reason why wee submit not to these whom thus we have overcome Thus much for the time and the place when and where this prophesy was revealed to Iohn I was in the spirit He sheweth how he saw this revelation viz. not with mortall eyes but being ravished in spirit his mind was carried beyond it self So we read that Peter and Paul praying earnestlie fell into a trance and conversed with God Acts 10 10. 15 16.9 18 9. The which againe confirmeth the divine authority of this booke For the following visions and the mysteries of them were revealed unto Iohn not by the power of any humane wit but by the holy Ghost Interpreters observe three kinds of visions First corporall when we behold the objects preserued with our bodily
Secondly Iohns commission to write the vision And lastly a commandment given him to send the same to the seven Churches And hence it is very cleare that Christ is that Son of God who spake in vers 8. For both there and here he taketh the same things to himselfe And there is no question to be made but that in this place hee speaketh himselfe and of himselfe Eniedinus the Samosatenian objecteth that these words are not in all copies nor yet in the Latin version and for this citeth the Annotations of Beza I answer though Aretas and Montanus have them not yet Andreas and the Editions of Paris have them with other approved copies Beza also confesseth that the repetition agrees well with the style of Iohn for Christ being to command John to write this vision declares his authority from his Godhead to the end he might not doubt but what he did was truely divine In these very words Christ speaketh of himselfe verse 17. and Chap. 21.6 22 13 so that it seemeth some hereticke adventured to blot this out of the vulgar version thereby to darken the divinity of Christ or els some presumptuous person did it who thought this repetition needlesse And what thou seest write in a booke The command of writing confirmeth the authority of this booke For John wrote this prophesie not of himselfe but by the commandement of Christ for though here the commandement bee particular to write this first vision yet in vers 19 it is Generall not onely of the things which are but which shall bee hereafter Write what thou seest This serveth for the authoritie of the booke for the Apostle is to write not the things which he thought fit but what God gave him to see And send it to the seven Churches in Asia By seven Rupertus understandeth all the Churches but it is to be taken restrictively of the seven greater Churches of Asia the lesse because they are expresly named Chapt. 2 chap. 3. Mark 13 37. and epistles directed to every one of the Bishops or Pastors thereof yet so as that saying of Christ appertaineth to this place what I say unto you I say unto all Ephesus Situated neer the sea was the head city of Ionia a famous mart towne and the more in respect of the temple of Diana which perished with the seven wonders of the world Here a tumult being raysed against Paul the towne Clerke cryed out yee men of Ephesus what man is there that knoweth not how the city of the Ephesians is a worshipper of the great Goddesse Diana and of the Image which fell downe from Iupiter Here the Apostle Paul taught and constituted a Church to whom afterward he wrote an Epistle And to Smyrna A sea coast towne in Ionia and a colonie of the Ephesians taking its name from Smyrna the wife of Thessalus and builder thereof In it was the porch and temple of Homer who as is said was born here it is probable that either Iohn or some other Apostle gathered a Church to Christ in this place And to Pergamus Or Perga●●● a city of Troas or Phrygia famous because of the Trojane tower Ovid. Lib. 13 metamor called Pergamus of which the poet mentioneth it was the country of Galen the phisitian from this place came store of that paper which we call parchment there is mention made no where of this place in the history of the Apostles unles it bee Acts 20 vers 6 where Paul remained seven dayes at Trods and raysed up Eutichus being fallen dead through the window so that it seemeth this Church also was planted either by John or the Apostle Paul Thyatira The Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is plurall it is a city of Lydia neer Pergamus seated on the river Lycus Act. 16 14. Acts 20 28. Of this city mention is made in the historie of Lydia a seller of purple of Thyatira it seemeth that Paul preached the Gospel in the place though when Lydia was converted to the saith shee heard him teach at Philippi To Sardis Gr. to those in Sardis a city of Lydia also by the mountain Tmolus of old the royall Lib. 5 cap. 29. and famous city of Croesus Plinie calleth it Moeonia Philadelphus A city of Mysia there was also a city so called in Aegypt another in Coelesyria but this Philadelphia was in Asia the lesse And unto Laodicea A city as Ptolomie saith of Caria But Plinie and Strabo affirme it to bee in Lydia For divers cities were so named as in Syria and Caria Lydia and Media but John was commanded to write unto Laodicea of Jonia which was neere Ephesus it seemeth that Paul had preached in this place because he willeth that the epistle which he wrote to the Colossians should be read in the Church of Laodicea The Angel or pastor of this place was an hypocrite being neither hot nor cold against whom Christ being highly offended threatneth destruction chap. 3. But happily it may seeme strange to some saith a learned interpreter where Rome was at this time to which for saving further labour this epistle might have been written in stead of all other Churches seeing she boasteth herself to be the head of all indeed Christ seemeth to have forgot himself in passing by his viear not so much as in one word to mention him who as it seemes should onely have been spoken to but the answer why Christ wrote not to him is at hand he knew he could not erre neither had neede of admonition therefore let this omission be one of the prerogatives of the holy sea And I turned to see the voice To see him who spake behinde him to the end hee might obey his commandement It is a figurative speech the effect being put for the cause for a voice is not seene but heard but Iohn being turned about comes to describe who and what maner of person he saw speaking unto him Thus much concerning the preparation to the vision now followeth the vision it self which first is described afterward explained And in the midst of the seven oandlesticks There appeared to Iohn seven golden candlestiks and in the midst of them one like unto the Son of man giving commandement to him to write the following visions and to send seven epistles to the seven Churches in Asia Christ himself propounding unto Iohn the arguments therof all which served for Iohns encouragement in his banishment and that the neighbouring churches might take notice of his Apostolical authority Interpreters dispute who it was that appeared to Iohn like unto the Son of man Some take it indefinitely for any man others for an angel others for Christ but the scope drift of the matter doth manifest it was Christ that appeared in this likenesse both because he commandeth Iohn to write this revelation vers 19 revealed the following visions to John chap. 4.1 which onely Christ did as also because he is said in vers 18 to have been dead but
to the Churches for he is the author of al these Epistles and Iohn his penman or scribe Which further proveth the authority of this book for without doubt after Christ had made an end of revealing the mysteries of this booke unto Iohn he faithfully wrote to every one of the Churches according to the commandement of Christ These things saith he that holdeth The first Epistle hath three parts namely an inscription a narration and a conclusion In the inscription Christ is brought in speaking to the church of Ephesus by a description of his person taken from the foregoing vision which serveth both for the authority of the Epistle and to stirre them up unto attention The manner of the stile is propheticall For so usually the prophets in stirring up to attention bring God in speaking thus to the people thus saith Jehovah So Iohn these things saith hee that holdeth c. not simply these things saith Christ but these things saith he that holdeth the starres c. Thus by degrees two things are repeated which he saw before One of the starres another of the candlesticks Which holdeth the seven starres That is which holdeth the seven Pastors of the Churches in his right hand as chap. 1 vers 16. This as we have already shewed may be taken either in the better part that is of Christs loving and caring for his faithfull teachers his governing and preserving of them by the right hand of his power with precious promised rewards Or in a contrary sence it signifies that Christ detesteth and by his right hand suppresseth and rejecteth all slowbellies hirelings and wolves And so much here he threatneth to some of these teachers unlesse they did repent Who walketh in the midst of the candlesticks First he saw him standing but now walking in the midst of the candlesticks signifying hereby that Christ our Lord sitteth not still in the heavens but is present by his providence in the midst of the Church beholding all things proving our faith and obedience and recompencing the same with great rewards disliking our slothfulnesse and other corruptions punishing the ungratefull by taking away their talent from them and bestowing it on others Levit. 26 24. This walking therefore imports Christs gracious presence with his Church according to that promise I will walke among you and I wil be your God So Christ I will be with you at all times unto the end of the world This being so it is our duty to walk reverently in the sight of God and of Christ that so they not being offended may walke and abide with us Ioh. 14 23. according to the promise if a man love me he will keepe my words and my father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him 2. I know thy workes In the narration are five things First their great diligence and constancy is commended for Christ prayseth and rewardeth the labour and faith of his servants because he delighteth therein I know thy workes This he speaketh not onely to this Church but to the rest yea to Laodicea also Here I take workes indifferently to be either good or bad vertues or vices of which as nothing is hidde from him so nothing shall passe without reward or punishment For it is the part of him that is the admonisher and judge to pronounce sentence of nothing but what is well knowen unto him He taketh unto himselfe not onely the knowledge of what is outward but also a cleare and perfect sight of men and all their inward actions the which Iohn often in the Gospel ascribes unto Christ He knew all men Ioh. 2 24 25. Ioh. 21 17. and needed not that any should testify of man for he knew what was in man and so Peter said unto him Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee But who knoweth all things save God alone for he seeth all things searching the heart and reynes of man So that this is the tenth argument 10 Argument of Chr. deity to be added to the former proving the Godhead of Christ taken from his omniscience or knowledge of all things And thy labour patience The first copulative and is put for to wit thy labour and patience so the like in vers 9.13 18. Moreover he commendeth three sorts of vertues in this Bishop labour in doctrine constancy in suffering Zeale in discipline which vertues he doth in many words commend in this and the following verse by a contrary order First his labour that is his sincere and unwearied paines in preaching the word 1 Thes 5 12. 1 Tim. 5 17. For the scripture in many places cals the office of teaching 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a labour as being full of wearisomnesse and trouble This is the first and principall vertue and honour of a faithfull Bishop the which Christ attributeth to this teacher But what would Christ now say of the mitred Bishops of these dayes who neither know the word of God and for the most part regard it not But being idle and dumbe are unfit to preach and so spend their time either in warre sports or following of their filthy lusts The second is sufferante that is patience in induring and constancy in overcomming the dangers injuries and afflictions with which they were exercised both by the Iewes and Gentiles for the sake of Christ For the crosse is an inseparable companion of the Gospel 1 Corinth 1 18. and therefore is called the word of the crosse both because it sheweth us the way to salvation through the crosse esteemed foolishnes by the world As also because satan doth stirre up his instruments to hate persecute and put to death the constant professors and teachers thereof as being the greatest opposers of his kingdome All which things the Angel of this Church patiently induring Iam. 1 12. is for the same highly commended of Christ for blessed is the man that indureth tentations for when he is tried he shall receive the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that love him And canst not beare them which are evill The third vertue for which Christ prayseth him Matth. 18 17. 1 Cor. 5 5. Apolog. 2. Apolog. chap. 39. Treat 35. in Matth. Rom. 7. is his singular Zeal in observing Church discipline namely his strong opposing of such vices as violently brake in upon the congregation and his due administration of Church censures against scandalous persons casting them out of the communion of the Church as Christ commanded And indeed Church censures were in full force in the primitive time to the great good of the Church as Justin Tertullian Origen and others of the ancient writers testifie And hast tried them Now he repeateth and declareth the particulars shewing in the first place who those evill persons were and wherefore he could not beare with them But vehemently withstood the false Apostles seeking to creep into the Church examined their false doctrine
are our bookes consisting of diverse leaves and so folded together but it was one volume of parchment written within and without according to the custome of the ancients who wrote in rolles and hence volumen a volume comes from convolvendo rolling Like as the Iewes to this day at Wormes Franck ford c. have their Torah written out in one volume of parchment These parchments because they were rolled up were commonly writ on the inside onely Wheras this on the contrarie was written within on the backside also which manner of rols were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is writings within and without of which see Plinie lib. 3. Epist 5. and Iuvenal Sat. 2. I therefore judge that this writing within and without signifies nothing els but the multitude of matters that is all such things as were exhibited unto John in this Revelation Origen saith that within were written the promises made to the Church and without or on the backside the punishments of the wicked But this to me seems frivolous A like booke written within and without was seen by Ezechiel Chap. 2.9 but it differs from the other both in matter and forme In that were written the lamentations because of the calamities to befal the people of Israel in their captivity wheras this booke containes the secret counsels of God concerning the last times That of Ezechiel was spread open before him but this was seen of Iohn rolled up Ierom understandeth that by both these bookes which were written within and without is signified the litterall mysticall sence of the scriptures But there is no solidity in it for neyther of these bookes doe signify the booke of holy writ neither doth every part of the scriptures admit a mysticall interpretation Sealed with seven seales This is the third circumstance touching the booke The number seven is not here put for many but is to be taken properly for after these there were no more seales opened We need not search what manner of seales they were it sufficeth to know that the booke was closely kept shut by them For there is a twofold use of seales first to keep things secret from the vew of others as letters doores cabinets chiests and the like and secondlie for the confirmation of writings as for example to authorise the edicts of princes sentences of magistrates and wills of the dead the seales of seven witnesses make these things altogether authentick Now this booke was not sealed in this latter respect but in the former as beeing shut or kept close from the understanding of men And therefore it could not be opened or read before the seales were taken away which was not don until the seventh seale was removed Let this suffice for the present that the contents of this booke so fast sealed were most obscure hid untill the seales beeing opened they were revealed unto Iohn by Christ The second part of the Chapter The difficulty about the opening of the Booke and of the seales 2 And I saw a strong Angel proclaiming with a loud voyce Who is worthy to open the booke and to loose the seales thereof 3 And no man in heaven nor in earth neither under the earth was able to open the Booke neither to looke thereon 4 And I wept much because no man was found worthy to open and to read the book neither to looke thereon 5 And one of the Elders saith unto mee Weepe not behold the Lyon of the tribe of Iuda the root of David hath prevailed to open the booke and to loose the seven seales thereof 6 And I beheld and loe in the middest of the Throne and of the foure beasts and in the middest of the Elders stood a Lambe as it had beene slaine having seven hornes and seven eyes which are the seven spirits of God sent foorth into all the earth 7 And he came tooke the booke out of the right hand of him that sate upon the Throne THE COMMENTARIE 2. ANd I saw a strong Angel The difficulty in opening of the sealed Booke now followeth The circumstances thereof are five First an Angel proclaimeth with a loud voyce if any one be worthy to open the booke and to loose the seales by which this Angel both stirs up a desire in Iohn and others of the heavenly inhabitants after the knowledge of these secrets as also gives them to understand as hereupon it presently appeared that no creature could find out the hidden and secret counsels and judgements of God concerning things to come but it was in the power of the Lamb onely to reveale the same Lyra affirmes that this was the Angel Gabriel who is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong from the Hebrew geber hence God is called El●gibbor Isal 9. But this to Ribera is ridiculous seeing the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong is put without an article but how then would he have wondred at Alcasars opinion had he seen it who makes him to bee Hosea In Chap. 10.1 a mighty Angel stands upon the sea and upon the earth sweareth by him that liveth for ever ever And Chap. 18.21 a mighty Angel casts a milstone into the sea Which some understand to be Christ others a created Angel and indeed it appeareth he was not Christ seeing he was not worthy to open the Booke Besides all the Angels of God are called Gibborei choach mighty in strength Psal 103.20 This therefore was a created Angel called mighty because he cryed mightily so as he was heard throwout the heaven Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 preaching with a great voyce because with a mighty courage he proclaimed the questiō about the opening of the booke before the whole company in heaven Who is worthy he saith not who can but who is worthy signifying that not skill or strength onely but worthines is also required For men out of curiositie may violently howbeit unrightly break open that which is sealed What is meant by opening the booke But this booke could not be opened eyther by violence or for curiosity sake but onely by worthinesse or merit He that opens it must bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 worthy that is indued with authority and divine power Now to open the booke is to make knowen the secret counsell of God about things to come 3. And no man Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 none in heaven c. This is the second circumstance Vpon the proclaiming of the Angel there is a deep silence in heaven For all creatures are dumbe as unable and unworthy to open this booke In heaven that is Angels and glorifyed saintes In earth men and beasts Vnder the earth Fishes or sea monsters Some also foolishly imagine that the divels in hell the soules in purgatory are here called upon But the scriptures by things under the earth meane that which is in the sea according to the second commandement or that is in the water under the earth c. Thus all created things are altogether
4. 3. From the efficacie and authority of their office v. 5. 6. II. Their warre with the beast where 1. we have the description of the beast his hostile invasion and victorie ver 7. 2. The martyrdome of the prophets and place of reproach v. 7. 8. 9. 3. The joyes of the wicked for the slaughter of the prophets with the cause of this their great rejoycing vers 10. III. The avengement of the prophets where 1. we have their restoring to life vers 11. 2. The astonishment feare of the wicked ibid. 3. Their glorious ascending up into heaven v. 12. 4. The shaking and ruin of Antichrists kingdome IV. An acclamatory conclusion of the end of the Churches calamities of judgement at hand v. 14. The latter part the seventh trumpet sounding declares the change of the Churches warfare in three particulars 1. An heavenly triumph because the kingdomes of the world were become Gods and Christs ver 15. 2. A triumphant song of the first companie viz. of the four and twenty Elders whose reverend cariage gratulatorie hymne is recited in which 1. they give thankes to Christ for freeing his Church and kingdom from the tyrannie of the adversaries v. 17. 2. They declare the vain fretting wrath of the wicked hereat v. 18. 3. They proclaime the resurrection of the dead with the last judgement ibid. 4. They denounce rewards unto the godly and punishment unto the wicked ibid. The excecution of judgement on the godly ungodly To the godly heaven is opened that they might see Iesus Christ the Ark upon the wicked are sent lightnings thunders eternal haile The first part of the Chapter Of the reformation of the Church by the two witnesses under the Westerne Antichrist 1. And there was given me a reed like unto a rod and the Angel stood saying Rife and measure the Temple of God the Altar them that worship therein 2. But the Court which is without the Temple leave out and measure it not for it is given unto the Gentiles the holy City shall they tread under foot fourtie and two moneths 3. And I will give power unto my two witnesses they shall prophesie a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes clothed in sakcloth 4. These are the two Olive trees and the two candlestickes standing before the God of the earth 5. And if any man will hurt them fire proceedeth out of their mouth and devoureth their enemies if any man will hurt them he must in this manner be killed 6. These have power to shut heaven that it raine not in the dayes of their prophecie and have power over waters to turne them to blood and to smite the earth with all plagues as often as they will 7. And when they shall have finished their testimony the beast that ascendeth out of the bottomlesse pit shal make warre against them shall overcome them and kill them 8. And their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great city which spiritually is called Sodome and Egypt where also our Lord was crucified 9. And they of the people and kindreds and tongues nations shall see their dead bodies three dayes and an halfe shall not suffer their dead bodies to be put in graves 10. And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoyce over them and make merry shall send gifts one to another because these two Prophets tormented them that dwelt on the earth 11. And after three dayes and an halfe the Spirit of life from God entred into them they stood upon their feete great feare fell upon them which saw them THE COMMENTARIE ANd there was given mee a reed This is a generall prophesie touching the restoring of the Church beeing declyned under Antichrist Before Iohn was commanded againe to prophesie But now to measure the temple of God with a measuring reed that is to prophesie of the measuring of the temple of God which should be afterwards in the times of Antichrist The measuring of the temple is the reformation of the Church The measuring of the temple signifies the building repairing thereof as appeares if this prophesie bee compared with that in Ezech. 40.41 c. unto which this place doth allude The Temple of God signifies the Church as almost all interpreters both ancient moderne understand it and indeed the words here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 temple of God are so taken 1 Cor. 3.16 2 Cor. 6.16 2 Thess 2.4 They who apply this to the temple of Jerusalem are refuted by the time it self for when these things were spoken unto John that temple with the city beeing utterly destroyed was never any more to be restored Lyra Lyras frivolous interpretation doting as his manner is applies it to the festivitie of the dedication of temples instituted by Pope Felix about the yeere 525. at which time the Bishop holding in his hand a sprinckling reed goes about the outward walles of the temple as if he were to measure the same and within on the floore from one corner thereof unto another he thwartwise writes downe the letters of the Greek alphabet and so measures the space within The words therefore Rise and measure he will have to be meant of Pope Felix speaking to every Bishop about the dedication of temples the court leave out or cast forth because masse may not be celebrated except the place be consecrated But I passe by these fopperies For Ribera and Alcasar themselves acknowledge that the Temple here signifies the Church of God Now let us see what instrument hee is to use what to doe with it wherefore and when First hee shewes the instrument A reed like unto a rod was given mee to wit by the Angel who before commanded him to eat up the booke and againe prophesie that is by Christ Ribera wel observeth that it was not a writing pen but a measuring reed because it is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like to a rod that is a great measuring staffe with which Architects use to mete plats of ground and buildings a measure of six cubites and a handbreth Ezech. 40.5 The Rod wherewith the Church is measured What is meant by the measuring rod of the Church is nothing else but the word of God the most perfect rule of faith and Church discipline Rupertus acknowledgeth it to be the authoritie of the Evangelical scripture So that this reed is indeed the same little booke which Christ gave unto John to eat it up the which is here againe delivered to him under the type of a reed or rule in regard of the measuring worke here enjoyned Thus also my Anonymus above 260 yeeres agoe The rod saith he is the sense of the scripture because as a rod of diverse colours it chastiseth sinners Rise and measure the Temple of God First he must measure the Temple Altar Worshippers therein Secondly leave or cast forth the inward court The reading of both is somewhat
that of the Apostle In all these things we are more then conquerours through him who loved us This victory in overcomming the world and the Beast is the faith of the Saints against which the Beast shall never prevaile The same thing speaks Daniel touching the little horne and the issue of the war made with the Saints He prevailed against them saith he untill the Ancient of daies came and judgement was given to the Saints of the most high And therefore the Beast shall not alwaies prevaile against the Saints but at length they shall judge the Beast for his power shall endure no longer then XLII moneths which serves for the comfort of the godly lest fainting under their long-during calamities they should cast away their hope of victory If thou enquire after the time of the warre When the war began it began to be made of old when the Beast first trod down the holy city and tyrannically persecuted al opposers by fire and sword In speciall the warre was at the height after the measuring of the temple which through the great mercy of God was effected in these last times By this warre the Councill of Constance tooke away the two witnesses Iohn Husse and Jerome of Prague and was afterward strongly prosecuted against the Saints by the Councill of Trent and yet is to this day And power was given him over all kindreds and tongues We have heard the declaration and usurpation of the power The universal power of the Beast Now he addes the largenesse and greatnesse thereof for that which in vers 3. was generally spoken The whole earth wondred after the Beast is now distributively spoken Power is given him over every tribe and tongue and nation It is therefore an amplification of his power from the largenesse of the territories in subjection to the Beast His power is universall so as none whither high or low in the Christian world but do either desire or are forced to submit to the Romish yoke Behold here again whither the spirit of God doth not point at the Catholike state of Rome that so Antichrist Christs adversary might be known even by the largenesse of his kingdom Psal 2.6 Psal 72.8 Hebr. 1.2 Rev. 5.9 For as CHRIST is appointed by the Father to be heire of all things from sea to sea He it is that hath redeemed us to God by his blood out of every tribe and tongue and people and nation so on the contrary the DRAGON hath given power to the Beast over every tongue and kinred and nation c. Yet lest we should think that Christ was wholly thrust out of his possession by Antichrist a limitation is annexed 8. And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him He much amplifies the dignity and worship of the Beast but withall limits the same He shall be worshipped as God in vers 4. it is said in preterperfect tense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have worshipped Here in the future 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall worship So that the Beasts maiestie shall not be for a short time but shall long endure untill it be fully manifested Notwithstanding the holy Ghost comforts the godly by a twofold restriction first in that he calleth the worshippers of the Beast inhabitants of the earth And therefore none but earthly men shall worship him for the Elect are not the inhabitants of the earth Phil. 3.20 but Citizens of Heaven in regard that their conversation is there So that Gods chosen shall not adore the Beast neither shall their salvation or Christs Kingdom be in jeoperdie but theirs onely who follow the Beast for they shall all of them be cast with him into the lake Chap. 19.20 The other restriction is more expressely set downe viz. that they onely shall worship the Beast Whose names are not written in the Book of life c. that is who were not elected in Christ unto salvation but reprobated unto death before the foundations of the world THEREFORE NO MAN CAN BE SAVED IN THE ANTICHRISTIAN CHURCH because all who are not written in the Book of life shall be cast into the lake of fire and brimstone Chap. 20.15 Let all therefore who love their salvation forsake the Popish Church The names of the Elect are said to be written in the Book of life The Booke of life by an usuall metaphor for we commonly write down the names of such who are deare unto us that we may continually remember them so God having in his eternall counsell elected some to salvation hath written their names in the Book of life so saith Christ Rejoyce because your names are written in Heaven The metaphor also may be understood of the Sonship of the Elect so that to be written in the Book of life shews that they are heires of glory for we know that such are to inherit whose names are written in the last will or testament of men The Booke of life is Christ for in him God hath elected us Therefore it is called the Booke of life of the Lamb that is of Christ because election is made in Christ hence none shall obteine eternall salvation but such who are ingrafted in him through faith the Lamb also is said to be slaine because election includes the blood and death of Christ for the sins of all true beleevers for God hath so decreed to save the Elect as that Christs satisfaction comming in as a ransome for their sinnes his justice might stand with his mercy From the foundation of the world This may be referred either to the next foregoing word slaine or else to the words before who are not written And so Aretas How the Lamb is slaine from the beginning of the world Ephes 1.3 Rupertus and some others take it because of another place not unlike to this Cha. 17.8 They that dwell on the earth shall wonder at the Beast whose names are not written in the Booke of life from the foundation of the world And Paul saith that we were chosen in Christ before the foundation of the World Notwitstanding the spirit doth not without cause immediately joyne the words from the foundation of the world with the Lamb slaine For he would commend unto us the sufficiencie and largenesse of Christs sacrifice in as much as the efficacie of his death and passion is extended to the very first beginning of the world and so unto all the faithfull from Adam untill the end thereof to shew that no man living shall obtaine eternall life except he be redeemed by the blood of the Lamb. But how could the Lamb be slaine before he was I answer 1. Pet. 1.19.20 Gen. 3.15 Heb. 11.1 Act. 9.4 It is true he was onely slaine once on the Crosse some sixteen hundred yeares ago by a reall suffering yet he is in divers respects said to be slaine before 1. in Gods eternall preordination viz. that he should be slaine in the appointed time 2. by promise that the seed of the woman should
the gates then here Here it shal be of security There for the exercising of spirituall trading night and day that is for the gathering of all Nations and the Kings of the Nations unto Christs kingdom Therefore the gates shall not be shut that is no man shal be kept out of the Church but they shall alwayes stand open that is all men shal be called unto the Church by the preaching of the Gospell Whence it is evident that the Prophesie there speaketh properly of the state of the Church-Militant and that the same is here applied unto the security of the Church-Triumphant 26. And they shall bring the glory and honour of the Nations unto it What in ver 24. he had said of the Kings onely he extends unto all Nations viz. that hither they should bring their glory and honour They shall bring the glory of the Nations for the Nations shal bring their glory By an Hebraism he nameth the GLORIE AND HONOUR OF THE NATIONS for the Nations that shal be glorified which then shal walk in the light of this City Which again makes nothing for the Church-Militant unto which indeed the Nations do bring their glory that is subject their wealth Cities Provinces and Kingdoms to Christ But by doing of it in this life they also bring the same unto the Heavenly City because for this Earthly glory they shall receive Heavenly glory Now this also is taken out of Isa 6. ver 11. and therefore is to be applied in the same sense as the former unto the Coelestial Citie 27. And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth This is the Third who are to be kept out of the Citie as enemies and unworthy Inhabitants who on the contrary are to be admitted as worthy dwellers There are three sorts of men to be kept out Defiled ones Workers of abomination and Lyars they being such as in ver 8. he had said should bee cast into the Lake of Fire namely the fearfull unbeleeving murderers whoremongers sorcerers Idolaters and all lyars Of whom we there spake neither is the reason obscure why these should have no entrance for all such persons are excluded out of the kingdom of God in this life by the expresse voyce of the Gospel Be not deceived 1. Cor. 6.9 neither Fornicatours nor Idolaters nor adulterers nor effeminate nor abusers of themselves with mankind nor thieves nor covetous nor drunkards nor revisers nor extortioners shall inherit the Kingdom of God Rom. 2.16 Because therefore Christ will judge according to the Gospell of Paul all these shall not onely be kept out of the Heavenly City but also by the Judge his sentence be cast into the lake of fire Now this also is contrary to the opinion touching the Church-Militant for much defilement enters in it and many dregs have as yet their influence there forasmuch as the Church of the called is a Field mixt with wheat and tares a floore containing chaffe and wheat a not drawing good and bad fish But the purity and perfect cleannesse of this City altogether agrees to the state of the Saints in Heaven But they which are written in the Lambs Book of Life That is the elect onely and faithful that are borne again in this life shall enter into the City above See our Exposition on Chap. 3.5 13.8 17.8 20.15 CHAPTER XXII The Argument Parts and Analysis THe Heavenly Citie he further commendeth by the River of living water running through it and by the tree of Life allwayes bearing fruit and standing in the midst of the street and on either side of the River Lastly by the Seat of God and the Lambe in the same as also by the happinesse and eternall glory of the Inhabitants thereof At length hee concludes the whole Prophesie by a short recapitulation of the things hitherto spoken and by the commendation of much profit thence flowing unto the godly as also by establishing the inviolable Authority of this Booke The Parts therefore are two THe former endeth the description of the Coelestiall Citie in the first five Verses The latter is a conclusion of the Prophesie thence unto the end In the former are foure commendations of the City I. The pleasantnesse by the running River the excellency whereof he commendeth both by the purity of the waters as also by its originall ver 1. A River of water c. proceeding out of the throne c. II. The fruitfulnesse and abundance of necessaries from the tree of life whose seat or place he first describeth In the midst of the street and of either side of the River ver 2. Secondly he commends the fruit both from the abundance It beares twelve manner of fruits as also from its continuall bearing Every moneth Thirdly hee praiseth the leaves by the excellency of their effects for healing c. III. The puritie and majesty of the Citie both by removing of all corrupting causes There shall be no curse in it ver 3. Neither night or darknesse ver 5. as also by an exposition of the great majesty because it shall be the throne of God and the Lambe and because his servants shall serve this great majesty ver 3. IV. The eternall felicity of the Citizens This he sets forth by foure degrees 1. By the sight of God 2. By the name of God written in their fore-heads ver 4. 3. By divine illumination 4. By the everlasting Kingdom ver 5. In the latter part which is a very Patheticall conclusion respecting the commendation of the Prophesie three persons are brought in speaking one after another every one almost twice viz. The Angel the Lord Iesus and Iohn The Angell first commends unto Iohn the dignity of this Prophesie ver 6. And he said to me these sayings Rendring two Reasons 1. The authority of the Revealer The Lord of the Holy Prophets c. 2. The truth of the matter revealed these sayings are faithfull and from the time which must shortly bee done ibid. The Lord Iesus first promising his comming shortly commendeth the Prophesie by its saving effect Behold I come quickly Blessed is hee that keepeth c. Iohn setting down his name repeateth his error in worshipping of the Angell and the Angels forbidding him to do it ver 8.9 I John c. The Angel in the second place forbids Iohn to keep this Prophesie secret ver 10. Seale not adding a two-fold reason 1. From the certainty because the time is short ibid. 2. From a two-fold effect one hurtfull accidentary It shall provoke the wicked to wrath ver 11. He that is unjust let him be unjust the other saving and proper which shall confirme them that are righteous and holy He that is righteous c. Againe the Lord Iesus by proclaiming his comming to be at hand ver 12. Behold I come quickly commendeth the Prophesie ver 14. Blessed are they that c. by divers Arguments 1. From the end of his comming ver 12. My reward is with
mee to give to every man c. 2. From his eternity and constancy ver 13. I am Alpha and Omega 3. From the profitable effect of the Prophesie ver 14. Blessed are c. that they may have right c. 4. From the hurtfull effect of wicked contemners ver 15 For without shall be dogs 5. From his singular good-will to the Churches to whom he would have the Prophesie revealed This he sets forth by an Apostrophe ver 16. I Jesus have sent and by titles proper to himselfe I am the root c. 6. By an argument from the lesse the Spirit and the Spouse the Church Triumphant desire my comming therefore every faithfull man in the Church-Militant ought to learne from this Prophesie much more to long after the same ver 17. And let him that heareth say come c. This he amplifies by the profitablenesse Let him take water and by the facility let him take it freely 7. From the inviolable authority of this Book unto which no man upon paine of damnation may adde or take ought there-from ver 18.19 For I testifie c. He concludes with a repitition of the promise of his sudden comming Surely I come quickly and closeth up all with Amen ver 20. Iohn applauds or earnestly wisheth the same Even so come Lord Jesus and wisheth the grace of the Lord Iesus to all the Churches and Saints ver 21. The grace of Our Lord c. CHAPTER XXII The Former Part of the CHAPTER Foure Commendations of the Coelestiall Citie 1. And he shewed me a pure River of water of life cleare as Chrystall proceeding out of the Throne of God and of the Lambe 2. In the middest of the street of it and of either side of the River was there the tree of Life which bare twelve manner of fruits and yeelded her fruit every moneth and the leaves of the tree were for the healing or health of the Nations 3. And there shal be no more curse but the Throne of God and of the Lambe shal be in it and his servants shall serve him 4. And they shall see his Face and his Name shall bee in their Fore-heads 5. And there shal be no night there and they need no candle neither light of the Sunne for the Lord God giveth them light and they shall reigne for ever and ever THE COMMENTARY AND he shewed me a pure River He goes on to celebrate the excellencies of the Heavenly Citie by attributing unto it all whatsoever may be required unto the necessity pleasure and happinesse of any Earthly Citie that under these types wee might in some measure learne to conceive in our minds and long after that unspeakable glorious blessednesse which is laid up for us in Heaven To the necessity of a Citie belongs the having of healthfull and potable waters The pleasantnesse of the City Vnto commodiousnesse to have navigable waters Vnto pleasantnesse to have Rivers running through the midst of the streets Hence the Citizens have cleannes refreshing much profit and delight All these things are here in our Citie even in a perfect and full degree For it hath not a Cisterne or Well or one Fountaine of water to drinke off but a whole River not muddie but most pure like unto cleare Chrystall not of corruptible water but of living water not running downe from the Mountains whence Rivers take their originall but proceeding out of the Throne of God and the Lambe not running about the wals without but watering the Market and Streets within I pray what can be imagined more pleasant and beautifull then this City who would not desire to be a dweller therein But here we are not to mind any thing Earthly For thus God speakes to us as to children and by earthly things which seem most faire and pleasant unto us he in some measure shadoweth out the pleasantnesse of Heavenly things It seemes indeed to be in some kind an allusion unto the Earthly Paradise which was watered by the River comming out of Eden running through the midst of it and divided into foure heads But that River was not cleare as Chrystall but drawing filth along with it neither was it of living water but corruptible neither did it proceed out of the throne of God and the Lambe but out of Eden namely Euphrates which is yet to this day in Mesopotamia and Babylon Therefore the elegancy of the Earthly Paradise is nothing to the pleasantnesse of this Coelestiall Citie It is also an Allusion unto Ezechiels waters Chap. 47.1 whence the description of this is taken in a great part Allusion unto Ezechiels Waters But those waters do not equall the praises of this River The difference in speciall is that the waters in Ezech. came out of the Temple But this River not so for the City had no Temple but out of the throne of God and the Lambe The reason of the diversity is this Their diversitie that the Vision of Ezechiel sets forth the state of the Church-Militant under Christs Kingdome in this Life and by the type of waters flowing out of the temple he shadowes out the doctrine of the Gospell by which Christ signified by the temple should savingly water the whole world Here is typed out the state of the Church-Triumphant after this life whose Chrystaline River shall proceed no longer out of the temple but immediately out of the throne of God and the Lambe Now this most pure River of living water above in Chap. 20.6 called the Fountaine of living water and in Chap. 7.17 in the plural Fountains of living water in the same sense that is not only alwayes flowing but also preserving eternall life is nothing else but the full knowledge of God which the Faithfull shall have not by the Ecclesiasticall Ministerie as now but by the immediate Vision of God himselfe and of the Lamb as also the unutterable puritie consolation joy and life which the Elect shal enjoy by eternall familiarity with God Christ and the Holy Angels By the River ANDREAS understandeth the washing of Regeneration or Baptism but Baptisme shall have no place in the Coelestiall Jerusalem Therefore he more fitly addeth that this River of God which abundantly watereth Jerusalem above is the holy Ghost which proceeds from the throne of God the Father through the Lambe God therefore shall immediately vivifie the Elect and shed forth upon them his owne light righteousnesse joy and life through the Holy Ghost which proceedeth from the Father and the Son 2. And in the midst of the street of it and of either side Thus much of the pleasantnesse of the Citie Now followes the fruitfulnesse and abundance of all things necessary to lively-hood and health of the Citizens Commonly Cities have their lively-hood and gaine by handicrafts commerce navagation tilling of the ground fruitfulnesse and encrease Our City shal be enriched with the tree of life the Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wood by a Synecdoche is put for a Tree Of Life
they cause troublesome vapours and smoake neither doe they give light any great distance Therefore we stand in need of the Sunne or Day-light But the servants of God shall not then want any of these things For there shall be no night and therefore no use of lights no not of the light of the Sunne it selfe because the Lord God shall enlighten them with the brightnesse of his majesty as before he said Ch. 21.23 The glory of God did lighten it and the Lambe is the light thereof and the Nations which are saved shall walke in the light of it And they shall reigne for ever and ever This shall be the very height of our glory in Heaven that wee shall reigne with God and the Lambe for ever more Now indeed Christ hath made us Kings and Priests to God and the Father but our Kingdome is yet hid in Christ But then the Kingdome of God shall be manifested in our selves Now is the Kingdome of grace then it shal be of glory Before in Chap. 20. ver 4. they that were beheaded reigned with Christ a thousand yeeres Then we shall all of us reigne with Christ for ever and ever and this is that which he there added in ver 6. touching the rest having part in the first Resurrection They shall reigne with him a thousand yeeres See the exposition there Now we shall so reigne as that God and the Lambe shal be the head of the Kingdome But shall not the Son then deliver up the Kingdome to the Father 1. Cor. 15.28 and be subject to him Yea verily but this he shall not do by laying downe the Kingdome and so cease to reigne For how should the King of kings and Lord of lords of whose Kingdome there is no end Luk. 1.33 ever cease to reigne but by changing the present and mediate forme of the Kingdome into an immediate and by abolishing all the adversaries of the Kingdom as we have elsewhere declared The Second Part of the CHAPTER The Conclusion asserting the profitablenesse and Authority of the whole Prophesie 6. And he said unto mee These sayings are faithfull and true And the Lord God of the Holy Prophets sent his Angell to shew unto his servants the things which must shortly bee done 7. Behold I come quickly blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the Prophesie of this Booke 8. And I Iohn saw these things and heard them And when I had heard and seene I fell downe to worship before the feet of the Angell which shewed me these things 9. Then saith he to mee See thou doe it not for I am thy fellow servant and of thy brethren the Prophets and of them which keepe the sayings of this Booke worship God 10. And hee saith unto mee Seale not the sayings of the Prophesie of this Booke for the time is at hand 11. He that is unjust let him be unjust still and he which is filthy let him be filthy still and he that is righteous let him be righteous still and he that is holy let him be holy still 12. And behold I come quickly and my reward is with mee to give every man according as his worke shal be 13. I am Alpha and Omega the beginning the end the first the last 14. Blessed are are they that do his commandements that they may have right to the tree of life and may enter in through the gates into the Citie 15. For without are dogs and sorcerers and whoremongers and murderers and idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh a lye 16. I Iesus have sent mine Angell to testifie unto you these things in the Churches I am the root and the off-spring of David and the bright and morning Starre 17. And the Spirit and the Bride say Come And let him that heareth say Come And let him that is athirst come And whosoever will let him take the water of life freely 18. For I testifie unto every man that heareth the words of the Prophesie of this Booke if any man shall adde unto these things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are written in this booke 19. And if any man shall take away from the words of the booke of this Prophesie God shall take away his part out of the booke of Life and out of the holy Citie and from the things that are written in this booke 20. Hee which testifieth these things saith Surely I come quickly Amen Even so Come Lord Iesus 21. The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with you all Amen THE COMMENTARY AND he said unto mee Thus farre of two Parts of the Booke the Preface and the Visions The third or Conclusion remaineth in which somethings respecting the Authority of the Booke are taken out of the Preface and some other things added by which the great utilitie and sacred Authority thereof is further commended as we shewed in the Analysis After the concluding of this Revelation an Angell saith unto John to wit one of the Seven pouring out the Vials who before shewed him the judgement of the whore and the Beast and afterward the magnificence of the Heavenly Ierusalem These words are faithfull and true That is not only what was last spoken but the whole Prophesie as Chap. 19.9 This is the Proposition unto the confirmation whereof the whole Conclusion respecteth that wee might beleeve the Prophesie to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Divine true profitable and saving unto the Church and so bee stirred up unto the continuall meditation thereof The Holy Ghost was not ignorant that many would call into Question the divine authority of this Booke for it was a long while rejected as being composed by the hereticke Cerinthus which errour we have before confuted in the Prologue But they ought to have beleeved the Angell saying These words are faithfull and true Faithfull to which we may safely give credit True which shall certainly be accomplished And indeed so it is for we who are now more then fifteen hundred yeers after the Revelation do if not see with our eyes yet certainly feel as it were with our hands the manifest accomplishment almost of all the Visions Here therefore wee have an evident note of divine authoritie and truth imprinted on this Prophesie against the most impudent assertion of BELLARMINE Lib. 4 de verb. cap. 1. which is that it can no way be gathered from the Scripture it selfe that some Scripture is divine What I pray is this but to give the Angell the lie who saith These words are faithfull and true But the liar condemneth himselfe in saying elsewhere that besides other arguments Lib. 1. cap. 2. de verbo the divine authority of Canonicall Bookes of Scripture may be proved from the scripture it selfe The Sophisters and adversaries of Scripture object that this Argument is not sufficient to Faith unlesse it be before proved and beleeved that the Angell or Writer uttering these things spake truth ANSWER First principles are not proved but laid
nature together The Father and the Sonne are correlatives and the Father is the first because by nature he is before all Therefore also the Sonne is the first because hee is before all things by nature Lastly he saith that a thing is said to be the first and the last Alpha and Omega in regard of order and placing like as the First Booke of Homer is called Alpha in this Monosticke or single Verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which signification saith hee is most convenient to this place because God hath appointed Christ to be the First Messias and Mediatour of the Nations neither will he give unto him any Successour in this office this honour he will not give unto another but Christ was and shal be the First and the Last Redeemer Hence hee is here rightly called Alpha and Omega ANSWER This indeed is the thing which the Hereticke after all his blasphemous shiftings would needs vomit out But this signification is the same with the first touching the arbitrarie priority of the Letters Alpha and Omega Why then thus much belching we deny not that Christ alone is ordained the Redeemer by God the Father But we deny these three things I. That Christ in respect of his Office of Redemption calleth himselfe Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end the first and the last which in Scripture are titles onely of the Eternall Deity II. We deny that this signification and example is agreeable to Christ for he which is Alpha and Omega the first and the last in order and place like as the Heretick maketh Christ to be Alpha and Omega that is the first and the last Redeemer he certainly hath a second a third and others betwixt like as after Homers Alpha followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gamma Delta Epsulon c. also follow even unto Omega Therefore according to the Hereticke after the Redeemer Alpha there should follow the Redeemers Beta Gamma Delta c. unto Omega Yea Christ should no way be Alpha and Omega because Homers Alpha is not Omega also neither is Homers Omega also Alpha and it should be false that Christ in this Office had no Successour and that he was as the First so the last Redeemer III. We deny that the Heretick beleeveth what he saith or that the thing he saith is true For he affirmeth that Christ was and shal be the first and the last Redeemer Notwithstanding he beleeveth not that Christ was the Redeemer of Adam Abraham and the Fathers of the Old Testament but beleeveth the Fathers were not redeemed by Christ yea that Christ had no being before hee was manifested in the flesh Both which assertions are false hereticall and blasphemous Now briefly wee will bring all the Heretickes subtilties into this one Sophism Christ is Alpha and Omega the first and the last c. either in a certain order that is an arbitrary and temporary priority and finality like as Alpha and Omega is in the order or ranke of the Greeke Letters or in time or excellency or as the cause or in priority of nature or lastly in order and place But he is not the first and the last in time nor excellency nor as the cause nor in priority of nature Therfore only by an arbitrarie priority viz. in rank order and place because he is appointed by God to be the first and the last Redeemer ANSWER 1. The Heretick though he reasoneth much touching A. and O. the first and the last yet he meddles not at all with the other title annexed the beginning and the end because he could not darken the same by his cavils Now seeing this Title doth absolutely denote that Christ is he from whom Rom. 1.36 and through whom and for whom are all things it alone sufficiently proveth the Deity of Christ II. The assumption as hath been shewed is wholly false III. The consequence is to be denyed from the insufficient enumeration of significations for the Hereticke omits the principle signification of Eternity by which properly God is the first and the last Isa 14.4 44.6 18.12 14. Blessed are they that doe The OLD VERSION Blessed are they that wash their robes in the blood of the Lambe which words are here repeated from Chap. 7.14 against the authoritie of all Greek Copies See Bezas Annotations The Relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His is not referred unto the person of Christ here speaking for hee would have said in the first 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my Commandements but unto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Booke as in ver 7. Blessed is hee that keepeth the sayings of the Prophesie of this Booke Here he repeateth the same Blessed are they that doe the Commandements 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to wit of this Booke There hee calleth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sayings here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commandements namely which were touching the not worshipping of the Beast and his Image the leaving of Babylon perseverance in Righteousnesse and Holinesse and such like Although the Enallage were not very harsh to apply the relative unto Christ That doe his that is My Commandements like as the Angell in ver 6. speakes of himselfe in the third person sent his Angell that is my selfe The reward therefore of them that do the Commandements of this Booke shal be blessednesse That they may have right to the tree of life Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Their power shall be on the wood or tree of life The blessednesse of the Coelestiall Citizens he declareth by two benefits That they shall have power to the tree of life of which ver 2. and enter in through the gates into the City They shall I say be perpetuall and most happie Inhabitants of the Heavenly Ierusalem How the Saints have right to Christ But being Christ is the tree of life it may bee demanded how they shall have power on Christ He understandeth it of a right not of ruling but of enjoying Christ and his benefits He is the Lord and Head we Subjects and Members The Head hath right of Dominion over the Members to command them The Members have right to the Head of enjoying him and to be quickned and directed by him See more of the Saints blessednesse ver 4.5 15. For without are dogs and sorcerers The reward of the wicked shall be utter darkenesse being shut out of this Heavenly City They shall be without because within shall be nothing but what is pure and holy neither shall any thing that defileth enter into it Ch. 21.27 Now what shal be without but utter darkenesse where Satan the Beast False-prophet Dogs and Sorcerers that is all Reprobates shall bee tormented in the Lake of fire and brimstone Of these wretches hee reckons up sixe sorts under which all are comprehended Dogs thus he nameth unjust and filthy men who with a dog-like madnesse tear the doctrine of the Gospel therfore Christ calleth these enemies of the truth dogs and swine Mat. 7.6 before whom hee forbids
will I give the Morning-Star for if the Morning-Star be Christ the sense is To him that overcommeth I will give my selfe or communicate my selfe with all my benefits unto him viz. joy and glory in part in this life but perfectly in the life to come 17. And the Spirit and the Bride say Come These kinde of abrupt sentences full of affection serve to stir up like affections desires and wishes in us Here the Lord Iesus commends unto us the studie of this Prophesie by the example of the Spirit and of the Bride They say Come that is from this Prophesie they long for my comming and that I fulfill the same Therefore ye also that heare the Prophesie ought to have the like desire And the Spirit and the Bride By the Spirit and Bride may be meant the spirituall Bride sanctified by the Spirit of God By the Bride I understand the Church especially the Triumphant She desires me to come that is to fulfill the Prophesie and to return to judgement that she might at length be glorified through a finall redemption like as the Soules of the Martyrs under the Altar did desire the full deliverance of the Church from all the miseries of this life Or we may understand the Spirit properly of the Holy Ghost Metalepsis is a figure whereby a word is put from his proper signification who above spake to the Churches in the Epistles of Christ in which it is often repeated Hee that hath eares let him heare what the SPIRIT saith unto the Churches In this sense the Spirit is said to wish the comming of Christ by a Metalepsis because it is the Spirit that makes the Bride to desire Christs comming in which sense also it is said Rom. 8.26 that the Spirit maketh intercession for us that is stirreth us up to make our requests and to cry Abba Father Come Namely to the full glorification of thy Bride This is the reason of the wish for the coming of the Lord shall be the full redemption of the Church the which seeing wee all doe expect wee must also wish for the comming of the Lord for as the Apostle intimates it is a note of Gods children to love his comming 2. Tim. 4.8 And let him that heareth This is the consequent of the former as if he should say If the Spirit and the Bride long for my comming then also let him that heareth the words of the Prophesie say COME that is ardently desire my comming for his redemption Thus hee would have us continually to pray Let thy Kingdome come by which we daily desire that the Lord Iesus by his comming would wholly destroy the Kingdome of Satan and perfectly set up his owne in us in eternall glory And let him that is athirst come He teacheth us what we ought to doe untill we obtaine our desire by a most large promise comforting us against the temptation of delay Let him saith he that is athirst that is that desireth full redemption and glory through my comming Come To wit unto me or unto the studie and meditation of this Prophesie It is an Answer unto the Churches wish as if he should say ye desire that I should come to your deliverance Yee therefore come unto me through Faith What it is to come unto Christ Mat. 11.28 Obedience and true Sanctitie being alwayes as it were girded with the same For to come to Christ is to receive his doctrine trust obey serve and wholly to give ones selfe unto him This is meant in the Gospell where hee saith Come unto mee all yee that are heavy laden AND VVHOSOEVER VVIL According to the promise Chap. 21.6 To him that is athirst I will give of the Fountaine of the water of life freely So here to them that come unto him he promiseth the living water of the pure Chrystalline River of the Heavenly Ierusalem This water is Christ himselfe the Fountaine of Life Or the Holy Ghost filling the Saints with Heavenly consolation This water is drawne or obtained by Faith and Prayer Therefore he saith Let him take That is by prayer beg and by faith obtaine the same It is not thrust into the hands of unwilling slothfull and drowsie persons therefore hee saith Whosoever will Hee saith not that it is in the power of free will but requires the will to receive it The will is ours but the will of receiving is not in us it is the gift of grace 1. Cor. 4.7 For what hast thou that thou hast not received Therefore the will and desire of grace is required to be in us that wee might bee quickned with the water of life Freely The Fountaine of grace which is open to all that desire the same is not to bee bought with the price of any thing but is freely bestowed by the merit and efficacie of the Lord Iesus Away therefore with the merits of Hypocrites 18. For I testifie These also are the words of the Lord Iesus not Iohns as appeares from ver 20. Before he said Blessed are they that keepe the words of this Prophesie Now he threatens a terrible curse unto all such as presume any wayes to adulterate this Prophesie For he foresaw that some would despise question and falsifie the same by their Additions Hee was not ignorant also that Antichrist with his false Prophets Falsifiers of Holy Writ would take liberty to falsifie the Faith yea usurpe to themselves absolute power over the very Scriptures of God Therefore he thought it necessary to defend the Authority of the Revelation and the whole Booke of Canonicall Scripture by this threatning as it were with a Seale that it might bee preserved entire unto the end for the Churches unto whose profit it was dedicated For I testifie The causall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For seemes an over-plus to Ribera by a Graecisme but as we shewed in the Analysis it is a seventh Argument commending the worthinesse of this Prophesie taken from the inviolable authority thereof Andreas for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reads 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I also testifie for so it is in the Text simplie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I testifie And so the Kings Copie hath it But all other Copies have it I also testifie neither is it without ground for the Lord Iesus assenteth to his Angell whom he had sent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to testifie these things to his servants as if he should say My Angell hath testified unto you and I also testifie with him For properly Summarturesai signifies to affirme a thing by a religious testimony or to urge it with serious contestation and so oblidge the Hearers upon pain of vengeance to obey the same But let us briefly consider to whom Christ doth testifie what it is and after what manner Vnto every man that heareth the words This Protestation belongs unto all that heare and read the same not one excepted And therefore neither Pope nor Councell have any right to adde or
take ought from the Scriptures but with the hazard of their Salvation If any man shall adde The contestation consists of two heads The first is that this Prophesie may not be adulterated by any Addition To adde What it is to adde to this Prophesie is not soberly and according to the Analogy of Faith to interpret the meaning of the Prophesie but to mixe other things besides what the Lord Iesus hath revealed by his Angell He addeth saith THOMAS which adjoyneth a lye for whatsoever is patched to the Scriptures of mens inventions that it might be accounted as divinely revealed is a lie Such are the Popes Traditions which seeing hee will make of like authority with the written word of God he addeth unto the Scriptures Therefore they are lies The other branch of the contestation is What it is to take away from this Prophesie that none may deprave this Prophesie by taking away from the words thereof He not onely takes away that derogates from the divine authority of the Booke which as Christ foresaw many would do but he also that any wayes changeth or maliciously perverteth or contradicteth any thing here written Of which offence such are not altogether free who obstinately deny that the manifest events of the Types touching the fall of the great Starre from Heaven into the Earth of the Beasts ascending out of the Sea and of the worshipping of his Image and Character of the Romane Babylon of the whore committing fornication with the kings of the earth the like are not yet manifestly fulfilled in the Papacy The summe of the contestation is that the integrity sincerity and sacred Authority of this Prophesie bee faithfully preserved in the Churches and that the contemners falsifiers and corrupters thereof be no way suffered under paine of Anathema or curse unto which as it followeth that man is liable that presumes to adde or take away ought therefrom for he saith Vnto him God shall adde the plagues This is the reason of the contestation the horrible curse of them that falsifie this Scripture by adding or detracting For if Falsifiers of Coine are liable unto the civill curse of the Law much more shall the Anathema of eternall damnation be inflicted upon the Corrupters of the Scriptures which are the word of God To them that adde thereto God will adde all the plagues of this Booke to wit the Seven last plagues and cast them into the Lake of fire and brimstone with the Dragon the Beast and the False-Prophet Chap. 19. 19. And if any man shall take away That the righteousnesse of Gods judgements may appeare he will punish the Corrupters of his word according to the quality of the offence To Impostors he will adde plagues To them that take away God will take away their part out of the Booke of life c. Their judgement shall bee much alike For as the former are threatned with plagues so the latter shall be deprived of all good His part Not what he hath but what he seemes to have He speaketh of the part or portion of eternall life which such shall have as are written in the Book of Life that blessednesse I say and Heavenly joy which the Inhabitants of the Holy Citie shall be partakers of And from the things which are written To wit which in the Epistles of this Prophesie especially Chap. 2. 3. are promised to them that overcome and from the things which in this Book are spoken touching the glorious state of the Saints in Heaven Chap. 7.9.20.21.22 Now they that shall be deprived of Heavenly blessings must of necessity lie under eternall plagues and punishment For betwixt these there is no medium This place is remarkeable against the Popish depravers of the Scriptures For two things are evidently proved First that the Holy Scripture is Authentique in it selfe and that it giveth testimony of its owne divine authority For what is truely said of this Prophesie is rightly by Expositers extended unto the whole Scripture Hence ANDREAS A fearfull curse saith he shall light on them who are not afraid to adulterate divine Scripture SECONDLY That the Holy Sriptures are so perfect in themselves as that the Romanists are to bee held for most damned falsifiers who deny that all Doctrines of Faith and Salvation are contained therein unlesse the traditions of Rome bee added Lib. 4. de ver 80. dei c. 10. Against this Bellarmine objecteth that only the integrity of this Book is established but not the perfection of the whole Scripture ANSWER Yea both this Booke and all the rest of Holy Scripture This appears because this Booke is the last and last written Therefore this threatning annexed is as the Seale of the whole Cannon or of all Bookes of divine Scripture For as God put too this Seal to the Bookes of Moses being the first Cononicall Bookes Deut. 4.2 12.32 Ye shall not adde unto the word which I command you neither shall ye diminish ought from it So to this last Booke he puts the same Seale that nothing might be added made equall or taken away from this or any other part of Canonicall Scripture Bellarmine objecteth to the contrary that it is not said which I have written but which I have commanded But frivolously for Exod. 24.12 God saith expresly Which I have written that thou mayest teach them And Hose 8.12 I have written to him the great things of this Law Adde to this the former reason that all Interpreters do acknowledge this Anathema to be pronounced generally against all falsisiers of Scripture Why the oracles of the Revelation are most taken out of the old Canon and that most justly For the evident argument hereof is that the greatest part of this Prophesie is as it were taken word for word out of the Old Canon so as the Holy Ghost seemes purposely in every of the Visions to allude unto certaine Prophesies of the Old and New Testament Now the reason hereof without Question was First indeed really to demonstrate that there was nothing wanting in the Old Testament unto perfection Secondly that by this apparent imitation hee might shew that in the writings of the Old Testament is contained the state and condition of the Church of the New Testament Lastly he sheweth that the Revelation is as it were a recapitulation of both the Testaments and containeth the summe and agreement of all the Holy Scriptures By the which againe it is plaine that this present contestation or protestation belongeth unto the whole Body of Sacred Writ 20. He which testifieth these things saith Ribera will have these words to bee Johns because of the like sayings in his Gospell Iohn 21.24 But the words following shew that they are spoken by the Lord Iesus for he addeth Behold I come quickly Notwithstanding there is no great matter in it Hee calleth himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Testifier because he testified that is revealed this Revelation unto John by his Angell Hence
Israel is not to be taken litterally 143. The Sealed ones who they were 329. diverse opinions about them 330 The Sealed in Chap. 7. and Chap. 14. compared together 331. The Second death 42. 528. The Second trumpet answereth to the red horse 160. How long the sixt trumpet was to sound 205. Securitie and fear in the Papacy 341. Seducement by signes 310. What it is to Seduce ibid. Separation from the Papacie commanded by God 459. Serpents have Venome in their head and tongue 191. The Seven Churches to whom John wrote 7. The Seven spirits who 9.54 The opinions of Andreas Lyranus and Ribera about the same 9. Seven is a perfect number 10. The Seven stars what they note 25. the Seven sounding Angels 152. 153. Seven put for an indefinite number 202. The Seven Mountains of Rome are the heades of of the Beast 420. 421. The Seventh ttumpet forerunner of the last judgement 247. The seventh trumpet what ibid. It puts an end to the Churches calamities 205. The Seventh viall answereth to the Seventh trumpet 398. The Seventh Angel 246. 247. The Sharp Sickle what it noteth 360. How it was thrust into the Earth by Christ 361. Shortly how to be expounded 4. The Short time of Antichrists reign how to be understood 121. 271. 272. The Sight of God is the Saints happinesse 251. A Signe what it is 364. Signes of assured peace 570. Silence for an half houre in heaven what it denoteth with diverse opinions about it 152. Sinnes reaching up to heaven 460. Romes sins do reach to heaven 461. Even small sins come to heaven that is unto Gods knowledge which refuteth the distinction of Veniall and Mortall sins 460. Sinners repenting in this life have an assured promise of pardon 50. The Sitter on the Red horse and on the Black horse with his ballance is Christ 111. 111. 113. the Sitter on the throne who he is described 87. Six distinct visions 84. the Sixt viall truely interpreted 392. 393. Sixtus V. Endeavoured to thrust Charles IX king of France and Elisabeth queen of England out of their dominions 130. The Sixt vision unto what times it belongs 402. 403. Slaughter of Antichristians 245. Smyrna a city of Ionia 21. The Smoke out of the bottomles pit is Popish Divinity humane decrees 172. the Smoak of punishment 353. Whither there be Smoak in Hell ibid. the Smoak of prayers ibid. Smoak a Symbole of Gods wrath 372. Socinus his blasphemous fiction 13. The Son of perdition destroyeth the earth 251. The Son of Man denoteth Christ 359. The Son shall deliver up the kingdome to the Father how 578. Songs of the Revelation 369. The Sounding of the fourth Angel 164. Diverse opinions about it ibid. The Sounding of the second trumpet how farre to be extended 161. The Souls of the Martyrs departed this life are with Christ 119. How John could see their Souls they being invisible 513. How they lived and reigned with Christ 515. Whither they reigned all together at one time ibid. They cease not to reigne after the thousand yeeres are expired 516. How the Souls do fall rise again 520. The Soul of signes is the word 470. The Souls of the Saints departed must not be worshipped 105. Spirituall fraternity betwixt Christs members is the bond of love 18. Spirituall famine of Orthodox doctrine in the dayes of Constantius and other Arian Emperours 114. 115. Spirituall life of the Souls with Christ 514 515. The Spouse and Wife how differing 480. Ornaments of the Spouse 481. To Stand and not stand in judgement what it signifieth 134. To Stand before the throne 146. To stand before God 543. The Standing of the four Beasts what it denotes 92. Stars falling from heaven who they are and when they fell 129. The Starres falling signifies Apostacie from the true faith 162. 261. Stars are teachers and Bishops of Churches 162. 170. why teachers are compared to Stars 25. The Strong wind blowing down the Figs is the Papall Authoritie 129. Structure of the old temple 213. The Subject of the Revelation 4. The Succession of the Romane Church 408. The Summe of the fourth vision 252. It s foure Acts 253. The Sunne Christ wholy darkned in the Papacie 173. Sun and heat diversly interpreted 385. 386. The Susian women were beastlie harlots 407. To Swear by the creature is a horrible impiety 204. The Sword proceeding out of the mouth of Christ our Captain with which he smiteth the wicked is spirituall 491. The Synecdoche in the 1000. yeers of the Martyrs reigne 509. is proved 516. The Synod called Sardicensis took its name of Sardica not of Sardis 54. The Symphonie of the heavenly inhabitants is perpetuall 147. T. TAbernacle of God is the Church 299. To Take of from the prophesie what it is Tamherlan his huge armie 189. The Temple of God is the Church 212. The Ten kings are to be differenced from the seven former 432. Who the Ten kings are 433. Ten dayes what they signifie 41. The Third part of men slain by the Turks 191. The Third Act of the second vision hath two parts 124. The Third universall vision 150. in what it differs from the former ibid. Its beginning and ending ibid. Third Act of the sixt vision 476. Third Angel 350. The Thousand yeers of Christs reigne and the Dragons binding are the same 531. these yeeres are not indefinitely to be understood 507. in histories and in the prophets they are never indefinitely taken ibid. wher they begin end 508. 531. how they agree with the 42 months 509 they cannot be referred to the last times 510. Why they are defined 516. the condition of the godly during these 1000 years 511. What Satan is said to do at the end of these yeares 530. Threatnings of punishment in Scripture are to be taken with a condition of repentance either expresly or tacitely 36. What the Threatning of the Harlots children teacheth us 49. 50. Three a number of perfection 394. The Three dayes and an half what they signifie 241. The Three Legates how they proceed out of the mouthes of three 394. Why they are said to be three impure spirits ibid. Who they are 395. Three books attributed to God in scripture 60. 96. The Threefold distinction of time what it noteth 276. Theodoretus his opinion of Gog and Magog 535. The Throne of Christ 83. The Throne of God denotes his dominion over all things 87. The white Throne of Christs glory 542. Thrones why set up 512. The Throne of the Beast is the Romane Sea according to Lyra 388. Diverse opinions about the same 389. Thyatira a citie of Lydia 22. Time times and half a time what it signifieth 276. The Time of Antichrists rising noted 316. 317. 318. The Time of betroathing and marriage 480. Timothie no Bishop of Ephesus in Johns time 30. The Title of the Revelation answereth unto the titles of the ancient Prophets and confirmeth the authority of the book 3. The Titles of the witnesses are not to be litterally