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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

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manifestation of this Revelation were lost by the destruction of Iudea and Ierusalem much lesse doe they remaine to this day For touching the small remainder of the Iewes now in their dispersion it is altogether uncertaine of what tribes they are Furthermore Andreas whom my Anonymus followeth applies certaine vertues to each tribe from the Etymologie or signification of their names as for example the sealed of the tribe of Judah are confessours of Christ the sealed of Reuben are the pure in heart enjoying the heavenlie vision But I passe this by as beeing more subtil then solid as for the signification of their names read Gen. 29. 30. 35. Now twelve thousand are sealed of every tribe for many are chosen by Christ out of all peoples and nations under Antichrist The naturall order of the tribes is not here observed Judah is put before Ruben both because it was the kinglie tribe of which Christ came according to the flesh as also because Reuben by defiling his fathers bed lost his birthright So at the numbring of the people pitching of the campes Iudah had the preeminence Num. 2.3 1 Chron. 4. The tribe of Levi contrarie to the ordinarie custom of the Scripture is here brought in for he had no inheritance with the rest Ephraim againe is omitted and Joseph is here placed in his stead contrarie to the order of the tribes Dan also is passed by the reason whereof most of the fathers and some also to this day will have to be because Antichrist should come of this tribe grounding their opinion on that in Gen. 49.17 Dan is a serpent in the way Iere. 8.16 the snorting of horses was heard from Dan. Whither Antichrist shall be a Iew and arise out of the tribe of Dan. And hence arose another erroneous opinion viz. that Antichrist should be a Jew by which fiction the devill so deceived the world as that Antichrist already sitting and reigning in the Church was not taken notice of avoyded But this Glosse is frivolous Dan shall be a serpent by the way that is of him Antichrist shall come neyther is there any thing to bee gathered from Ieremies words out of Dan wee have heard nighing of horses that doth at all concern this matter But the Ancients are the lesse to be blamed not having the meanes and knowledge of histories touching Antichrist which we now enjoy and see with our eyes which the Papists themselves cannot but also see if they would confesse it therfore they are the more ridiculous in alleadging such foolish things Lib. 3. de Papa Romano Why the tribe of Dan is omitted the vanity whereof Bellarmin himself confesseth For where is now the tribe of Dan Others therefore affirme more probably that the Danites are not mentioned because of old they forsooke the worship of God leaving the fellowship of their brethren became like unto the Gentiles as we read Iud. 18. which seems also to be the reason why they are not mentioned with the other tribes 1 Chro. 7. But suppose it be granted that Antichrist shall come of Dan what doth better suit with the Pope then this For Dan signifies to judge Now who but the Pope alone judgeth all men himself is judged of none doe not the Popes parasites make him to be this Antichristian Dan or judge See Gratian distinct 40. Cap. si Papa The latter part of the Chapter Touching the harmonious thanksgiving of the heavenlie inhabitants of their blessednes 9. After this I beheld loe a great multitude which no man could number of all nations and kinreds people tongues stood before the Throne before the Lambe clothed with white robes palmes in their hands 10. And cryed with a loud voyce saying Salvation to our God which sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lambe 11. And all the Angels stood round about the Throne and about the Elders and the foure beasts fell before the Throne on their faces and worshipped God 12. Saying Amen Blessing and glory and wisedome thankesgiving and honour and power and might be unto our God for ever ever Amen 13. And one of the Elders answered saying unto mee What are these which are arayed in white robes and whence came they 14. And I said unto him Sir Thou knowest And hee said to mee These are they which came out of great tribulation and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lambe 15. Therefore are they before the Throne of God and serve him day and might in his Temple and he that sitteth on the Throne shall dwell among them 16. They shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sunne light on them nor any heate 17. For the Lambe which is in the midst of the Throne shall feed them shall leade them unto living fountaines of waters and God shall vvipe away all teares from their eyes THE COMMENTARIE 9. ANd after this I behold and loe Lyraes opinion touching this multitude a great multitude Lyra observes wel that here is described the comfort of the triumphant Church Notwithstanding he restraines it to the martyrs onely who suffered under Diocletian and Maximianus But we may easilie perceive by this 9 verse that the multitude here mentioned is to be understood in a larger sence Others for the most part suppose Other mens opinions about it that as before the number of the Iewes so here the sealed of the Gentiles are described but in this place we find nothing spoken concerning sealing Besides Iohn saw the hundred fourty foure thousand sealed ones in the earth But this great multitude he seeth before the Throne of God in the heavens and therefore it is certaine that as the former multitude noted the militant Church so this here the Saintes in glory but how doth John so suddenly passe from the one to the other this indeed I finde not to be opened by any interpreter But the method by me propounded doth clearely manifest the reason thereof For as the former part of this Chapter touching the sealing of the elect under Antichrists kingdom doth cohere with what was spoken Chap. 6.12.13.14 concerning the Antichristian earthquake beeing as it were an antithesis of Act the third So the latter part touching the joy of the Church triumphant accords with what is described in 15.16.17 verses of the said Chapter touching the cryes and punishment of the enemies as an antithesis of Act the fourth So that these things by parallels are thus to be opposed as contrarie each to other Parallell of Act the third Chap. 6. vers 12.13.14 Antichrist shall raise an horrible earthquake in the Church and hinder the preaching of the word and bring all things unto a finall destruction which he hath now done a thousand yeers Chap. 7. v. 2.3.4.5.6.7.8 Christ ascending from the East shall seal the elect in the midst of Antichristian commotions wil alwayes keep and
Elders were brought in as Harpers before the throne but these Harpers here are differenced from the Beasts and Elders for they are said to sing before them vers 3. This therefore is a distinct troop of blessed Martyrs and Professours of the Church triumphant who as I said even now were departed this life The allegory of the Law and the Gospel is not here set forth had finished their warfare before Antichrists rising I am not ignorant that most interpreters allegorically apply this voice first thundring afterward pleasant the first to the preaching of the Law which is terrible to the wicked the second of the Gospell which sweetly affects the consciences of the godly but this application here seems to me to be strange and uncouth for after the appearance of the dreadfull monsters viz. the Dragon Beasts c. Now comes this company of harpers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to delight the heavenly theater before that the preaching Angels went forth Neither was that voice any thing else but that new song of wich it followeth 3. And singing as it were a new song Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and sung by changing the participle into the verbe for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 singing or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who also sung He expoundeth what the melodious accord of the harpers was and where As it were a new song New harmonies usually more delight the hearers then such as are old and often heard Such was the Song of these Harpers rare new and worthy to be heard Or New that is excellently setting forth the new rare and unspeakeable benefits of God and the Lamb for so the Hebrewes as generally may be seene in Davids Psalmes call that a new song which is rare and most sweet The Argument of this new song John here indeed doth not speak of but he declared it before in Chap. 5.9 Where the Beasts and Elders sung a new song to the Lambe saying Thou art worthy to take the booke and to open the seales thereof for thou wast slaine and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred and tongue and people and nation c. And Chap. 7.9.10 Where the innumerable multitude clothed in white robes cried with a great voice Salvation be to God who sitteth on the throne and unto the Lamb And a little after Amen blessing and glory and wisdome and thankesgiving and honour and power and might be unto our God for ever and ever Amen c. Vndoubtedly this song was the same As for the circumstance of the place It was before the throne and before the foure Beasts and Elders Hereby he intimates two things first that this voice was in heaven and so we are to thinke that John heard the same from thence And therefore it was a song of the Church triumphant in heaven not of the militant in earth Secondly that this multitude of singers is distinct from the Beast and Elders for they are said to sing before them They were therefore a certaine troope of triumphant Saints who afterward came to the company of Beasts and Elders for the Church triumphant is not yet full but daily increaseth with new members who finishing their warfare here on earth are added unto them untill in the end it become truely universall and catholick Touching the Beasts and Elders see the notes on Chap. 5. vers 4.6.7 and Chap. 7. vers 9. And no man could learne that song Now he turnes his speech to the multitude that were sealed honouring them with excellent titles which are seven in number as we observed in the analysis of which some were proper unto the state of their warfare in this life But the most appertaine unto the state of Glory For the drift of this place is to teach us that Christ will not onely preserve his elect or sealed in their conflict against Antichrist but also at length gather them unto the heavenly multitude of Harpers that with like joy they may sing a new song to God and the Lamb. This chiefly serves to comfort the godly here groaning under the crosse Now this is the third member of the comparison for as Chap. 7.13 One of the Elders asking John Who are these did declare the like titles of them that were clothed in robes These are they which came out of great tribulation and have washed their robes c. So here John doth either himselfe or heareth this multitude of sealed ones to be adorned with like honourable prayses for perhaps these were the words of the harpers touching them that were sealed These are they which are not defiled with women c. These epithites seeme to be diverse but most are of the same nature or are consequents as we may see by the diligent comparing of them together The first title in which they differ from others is their teachablenesse that no man could learne the new song but they Here first it appeareth Teachablenesso wherefore this company of Harpers in heaven were here brought forth to wit as examples of the sealed yet remaining on earth for our indeavour studie ought to be the same with theirs in heaven By which very thing the most sweet communion of the Saints both in heaven and in earth is signified Secondly the docility and praerogative of them that were sealed is commended They and they onely could learne this new song But how can they doe it not indeed by their own wisdome but by the speciall illumination of the Spirit which God onely vouchsafeth unto them therefore the reprobate cannot learne it But doe not many of them know the doctrine of the Gospel True yet have they not a saving knowledge They doe sometimes professe and boast of faith c. but they never can apply the benefits of the Lamb by faith unto themselves and praise him with their whole heart For no man can say that Jesus is the Lord 1 Cor. 12.3 but by the holy Ghost This teachablenesse therefore is a priviledge of the sealed Thirdly hence it appeareth what this seale of the living God is which the faithfull are said to have in their foreheads Chap. 7.3 In vers 1. it is called the name of the Lamb and the name of his Father Now he saith that it is a new song the which onely the sealed can learne It is I say that rendring of honour and prayse for the benefits of God and the Lambe the which the Elders and multitude clothed in white ascribed unto them in Chap. 5. Chap. 7. viz. their sincere faith and confidence in God and the Lambe joyned with a continuall celebration and thanksgiving By this signe the worshippers of the Lamb are separated from the followers of the Beast Fourthly it appeareth that this seale is attained and imprinted in the foreheads of the Saints in this life It is attained I say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by learning without which we cannot have it and for to learne it we must continually exercise
our selves in the reading meditating and hearkning unto the word of God and calling upon his name And hence the benefit and worth of the ministery is commended as being the meanes by which we come to know this new song even while we are here in this life for in the world to come there shall be no use of instructing but all shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught of God Moreover it hence appeareth that this multitude belongs to the Church militant who by learning the new song of the harpers shall also at length stand before the throne and be joyned unto the Saints triumphant in heaven as we shall see in vers 5. These were redeemed from the earth Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bought This is the second commendatory title of the sealed Freedome The liberty which the Lambe hath purchased for them They are bought I say that is redeemed But with what price by the blood of the Lamb as Ch. 5.9 Whence out of the earth that is by a synecdoche from among the inhabitants of the earth by which name John in this Revelation doth alwaies denote the reprobate worshippers of the Beast as being children of the earth given to earthly desires nay he closely intimates that these also sometimes were of the number of them being servants of Satan and sin but by speciall mercy are brought into the liberty of Gods children through the blood of the Lamb. 1 Pet. 1.18 Peter excellently interpreteth this place Chap. 1.18 Knowing that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver gold from your vaine conversation received by tradition from your fathers but by the precious blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot The same benefit of redemption the Elders celebrate Chap. 5.9 Thou hast redeemed us to our God by thy blood And indeed this benefit we enjoy in this life for now as many as through faith are sealed in the blood of the Lamb are redeemed howbeit the fulnesse of our redemption is reserved to the life to come But are not all redeemed by Christ dyed he not for all 2 Pet. 2. saith not the Apostle Peter that he bought the false prophets by whom he is denyed To this Augustine well answereth that all are said to be redeemed according to the digni●● of the price which would suffice for the redemption of all men if all by faith did receive the benefit offered But as many as passe the time of their being in this life in infidelity they remaine unredeemed through their own fault The sealed therefore are onely redeemed because they alone by faith receive the grace of redemption through the grace of election which God vouchsafed them not to the others from all eternity 4. These are they who are not defiled with women Their third commendation is Chastity Chastitie They have not defiled themselves with whoredome The reason is added for they are virgines that is undefiled or else the causall may be adversatively taken They are not defiled but are Virgines Before I give the true meaning I will in a few words vindicate the depravation of the place The ancient hereticks called Hieracites urging the letter The depravation of this place by the hieracites forbad matrimony as an uncleane thing and hence established the merits of virginity because said they they who are not defiled with women that is unmarried persons onely shall follow the Lamb whether soever he goeth Thus they expounded it litterally The same thing Tertullian also affirmed and after him Jerom who though he did not condemne marriage yet he called it a pollution lifting up the merits of virginity into heaven for besides innumerable scoffes in detestation of matrimony he also wrests this place against Jovinian who taught that virginity was of no greater merit before God then matrimony his words are these Lest we should thinke that they are said not to be defiled with women who abstaine from fornication therefore he addes for they are virgines By the undefiled therefore he understandeth such as have no wives by virgines such as have no husbands Therefore it shall be the merit of virginity to follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth where the married cannot follow him This Ribera also is not ashamed to maintaine But it may be clearely shewed that this place serves neither to disgrace marriage estate The vindication of this place nor to establish the merit of corporal virginity First the Scriptures testifie that matrimony is an ordinance of God and is honourable among all and undefiled Who therefore without blasphemie may say that marriage is a pollution and defilement Secondly the Apostle commandeth married persons to give due benevolence to each other and calls the very conjugall worke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 7.3 It is false therefore that husbands rendring the due to their wives are defiled with women Theod. l. 4. epist 22. But as Paphnutius said in the Nicene Councill which went about to prohibite Bishops to marry marriage is honourable and to lie with ones owne wife is chastity Now if the words for they are virgines should be understood of virgines according to the flesh as Ribera the Iesuite following Hierom will have it then many absurd blasphemous and impious things will necessarily follow I. It is proved that corporall virginity is not here understood That none of the holy Patriarches Prophets and Apostles who all were married Iohn perhaps excepted can follow the Lambe II. That al both of the Iewes and Gentiles to be converted to Christ under Antichrist should be unmarried persons none married then which nothing is lesse credible III. Seeing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies maidens that have not known man it would follow that this company of Harpers consisted all of pure virgines or maidens which is absurd even to Alcasar himselfe IV. That all virgines according to the flesh should follow the Lamb and so consequently the Priest of Cybele and the Goddesse Diana who loosing their genitours by taking in poison remained virgines according to the flesh V. Not one of a thousand of the Popish Priests who vow chastity should follow the Lambe because they are no virgines but are all for the most part whoremongers and have concubines VI. Hierom himselfe should be excluded from the Lambes society because howev●● he extolled virginity with praises even up to heaven yet himselfe had it not as he confesseth in the Apologie to Pamm●●ius where he saith I lift up virginity to heaven not because I have it but because I the more admire that I have it not Therefore he being polluted with women was no virgine Lastly the holy Scripture doth so joyne all the faithfull with Christ whither they be married or unmarried as members with the head so as they can never or no where be separated from him as Christ saith Father Ioh. 17.24 1 Thes 4.17 I will also that they whom thou hast given me be with me where
not worship the first to be slaine How they overcame the beast how then do they conquer seing they are slaine I answer the victory of the Saints is spirituall They are indeed bodily overcome and slain by the Beast suffering punishments and torments this way yet spiritually they overcome the beast while by refuting and condemning his false and idolatrous worship they constantly persist both in life and death in the true faith of Christ This is the victory of the holy Martyrs and Confessours of which it is said 1. Ioh. 5.4 The victory that overcometh the world is our faith It is bloody indeed and not obtained without great resistance yet it so far excelleth all the triumphs of Alexander and Caesar by how much the Beast is more cruell then those Monarchs They by force of armes brought some part of the world under their power But to this Beast the Dragon gave great power so as the whole world followed and wondred after the same This victory of the Saints John makes as it were fourfold The victory of the Saints foretold I. They got the victory over the beast that is over Antichrist himselfe whose power threatning and Tyranny they despised and contemned cleaving constantly unto Christ II. Over his Image to wit which he caused to be made for him by the Inhabitants of the earth This we have shewed to be that whole Idol worship by which the worshippers of the Beast rage againstall who refuse to adore him and his Image Now to contemne this so great a madnesse and overcome it by their blood is to get the victory over the Image of the beast III. Over his character viz. which the second beast caused to be imprinted in the right hand or foreheads of the worshippers of the first beast Chap. 13. verse 16. This we shewed to be both a common and speciall obligation to the profession and worship of Antichrist Over this Character the Saints and Professours get the victory when they cast off the beasts religion and constantly refuse to be obedient unto him IV. Over the number of his name which in Chap. 13. vers 8. he shewed was 666. being Antichrists nationall name expressed in the Hebrew letters of ROMANVS and the Greek LATEINOS as before we shewed Over this number and name also the Saints get the victory by communicating no more in the Romish Idolatry Latine service Masses c. This is the victory for which the company of harpers sing songs of Prayses to God Whether these harpers are the Martyrs or other Professours But are these harpers the Martyrs in Heaven or the faithfull in the Church Militant Some interpret it of the Church Triumphant others of the Church Militant applying it to the Protestant Churches in Germany France England and other places who are said to have overcome the beast by casting off the yoake of the Pope having obtained the liberty of a more sincere doctrine from their Emperours and Kings For my part I understand it simply to be the same company of harpers who in the foregoing Vision Chap. 14. ver 3. by a new song did gratulate the company of sealed ones standing with the Lambe on Mount Sion Neverthelesse Brightmans opinon is not altogether to be rejected because the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who overcome is in the present tense for if the triumphant Church were onely meant hee would have said in the preterperfect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or in the Aorist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who have or had gotten the Victory The participle therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being put in the present doth also include such who obtain Victory over the beast even in this life Furthermore from this place there ariseth unto us a most sweet consolation touching the spirituall victory we obtaine over the beast by the sincerity and constancy of our faith although the Beast bite kicke persecute and kill us It serves also to stir us up stoutly to resist him Besides it furnisheth us with three things for the true understanding of the foregoing matter The Sea-beast is Antichrist First that the former beast ascending out of the Sea could not be the old Romane Empire but necessarily Antichrist The reason is because these holy harpers sing not a triumphant song for any conquest they had over the Romane Empire seeing they never made war against it for Christians according to the precept of the Apostle were allwayes obedient to Emperours The Sea-beast and that rising out of the earth is the same Antichrist but they celebrate the victory over Antichrist with his sinfull deceits and inventions Secondly that the first and second beast in a divers respect denotes one and the same Antichrist as before we have declared The reason is because one that is the former is onely mentioned who being overcome the latter was so likewise Now the Saints rejoyced and sung because Antichrist was overcome Thirdly Antichrists Kingdome cannot bee straitned to four years that Antichrists Kingdom cannot possible be restrained to the space of foure yeers as the Papists will have it The reason is because many Martyrs and Professours had already gotten the victory over Antichrist before the Plagues were poured out upon the throne and worshippers of the beast Now all the plagues cannot be comprehended within so short a space but must longer torment the followers of Antichrist as we shall see hereafter Therefore it necessarily followes that Antichrist bare sway and made war with the Saints long before those foure yeers forasmuch as here it is said he was overcome by them Thus much touching the persons of the Harpers now let us see where they were I saw as it were a sea of glasse Lyra whom Gagnaeus followeth makes this sea the Sacrament of Baptisme which is glasse that is pure mingled with fire that is with the regenetating grace of the holy Ghost Andreas will have it to be meant of the multitude of them that shall be saved in which sence the sea and harpers should be the same which is not proper Lambertus of the large knowledge of the truth Brightman the doctrine of the Gospell said to be glasse that is perspicuous and clear but mingled with Fire to wit of contentions and strifes which Satan hath raised amongst the teachers of the Gospell But these opinions I passe by Before in Chap. 4. verse 6. John saw before the throne a sea of glasse like to chrystall which is the purest glasse Now here he sees the same sea It denotes the world of wicked men Ribera rightly calls it the multitude following Antichrist for the sea is called a gathering of waters The waters are the wicked nations obeying Antichrist as in Chap. 17. And Ierem. 51.42 Cyrus Army that vanquished Babylon is called a sea comming up upon her and covering her with the multitude of the waves thereof The sea therefore is a gathering of people or the whole multitude of the ungodly that is the world tossed like
are here on earth serving him with seare in faith and true piety viz. all the Elect and faithfull of the Church militant here below Whereas therefore the heavenly Herauld doth stir up in generall all the servants of God to praise him and in speciall all his fearers he sheweth that not only God is to be celebrated by the companies of the heavenly inhabitants apart but with ioynt wishes and voyces of all Gods servants together as wel of Angels as men as wel of the Saints triumphant in heaven as of the militant on earth that is by the vniversall consent or accord of the whole Catholick Church This exposition is not obscurely confirmed by the Vniversal particle All ye his servants No one therefore of Gods servants is to be silent The distribution also prooves the same small and great Therefore both children and old men men and Angels are invited to this duty of prayse Hence now may easily be understood what is meant by that great multitude whose loud and terrible sound Iohn did erewhile hear Moreover we see this voyce belongs to us also For if God be our God we must wholie imploy our selves in his service we must not be the servants of men and slaves of sinne but if we be Gods servants him we must feare above all things and onely worship If we feare God then let us joyne our selves to this Chore and gladly celebrate the Lord with all his servants 6 And I heard as it were a voyce Behold the essicacie of the heavenly voyce the willing obedience of Gods servants being commanded to prayse the Lord they all readily lift up their voyce to his praise Of a great multitude The old version corruptly renders it a great Trumpet This great multitude is the Vniversall Church of Gods servants in heaven and earth as we see by the voice comming out of the throne Therefore this voyce accord is great divers and weighty as it were of many waters running swiftly through uneven places so as a man cannot heare himselfe speake or of many thunders with whose eccho heaven and earth is filled Thus the holy Ghost aggravates this voyce not that it was terrible saue to the ungodly but so vehement and weightie that the Beast and Dragon with all his fornicators might yea were forced to hear the same By such like metaphors the voice of the 144000 sealed ones is amplified Chap. 14. 2. See the exposition on that place And they are taken out of Ierem. 51.55 This song of prayses belongs to the last times Now it will appeare from the following Hymne that this whole praysing song belonges to the last times not long before Christs comming to judgement in which undoubtedly we now live and therefore we are bound to joyn our voyce with the same the Church triumphant sings in heaven the church militant hath with joynt desires almost these hundred yeers since which the Church began to be purged from the dregs of Antichrist sung praised the Lord because he hath set up among us the kingdome of his Son and freed us from the tyranny of Popery intreating him at length to deliver that great whore to condemnation and avenge the blood of his servants on her Halleluiah for the Lord reigneth They begin the hymne as before with Halleluiah But the argumentes of their joy are more magnificent then before And they are two One properly concernes the glorie of God the other of the Church Of the former they say Because the Lord God omnipotent hath reignea that is hath now at length declared that he is truely king omnipotent God indeed alwaies reigneth How God now reigneth and is to reign afterward and did never cease governing the world and Church But now his kingdome is obscure because of Antichrist and wicked mens cruelty who hitherto have as it were without punishment tumultuously raged in his kingdome But at length God shall reigne alone and manifestly having subdued all adversaries and abolished all powers in this life Then he shall be said truely to reigne when he shall appeare so to reigne as that in regard of his following glory he seemed not to have reigned before For many things are then said to bee when they begin to be manifested Therefore he is said then to reign not according to the essence but forme of his kingdome in which respect also Paul saith 1. Cor. 15. That then Christ is to deliver up the Kingdome to God his Father 7. Let us bee glad and rejoyce By another more effectuall argument they stirre up to gladnesse and praysing of God from the circumstance of time At joyfull times we are to rejoyce But weddings are times of gladnes then the bridegroom and the bride with great applause of kindred and friends goe to embrace each other But least they might seeme to rejoyce for their owne good onely they adde And let us give honour to God Not by conferring on him that which he hath not but by acknowledging and celebrating his infinite justice and power in punishing the wicked his goodnesse and mercy in vindicating his servants the which he hath from and by himselfe So that they shew unto us the fountaine and manner of true rejoycing in God For then we truely rejoyce when we give honour to God when we acknowledg and confesse with a willing mind that God is the author of that good we enjoy so saith the Apostle I rejoyced greatly in the Lord Philip. 4.10 and bids us to rejoyce in the Lord our God that is to attribute the glory of all good to God Hitherto the exhortation Now let us consider the reason Because the marriage of the Lambe is come The Lamb is Christ as before we shewed His wedding or marriage is the solemne and most joyfull copulation of the bride and bridegroom Christ is the bridegroom so he calleth himself Marc. 2. 19.20 1. Tim. 2.6 Ephe 5.27.26 and so the Baptist cals him Iohn 3.29 But who is the bride The holy Catholick Church 2. Cor. 11.2 Ephes 5.26 whom Christ hath espoused by giving himselfe a ransome for her sanctifying and cleansing her with the washing of water by the word to present her to himselfe a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing c According to the promise I will betroth thee unto mee for ever in righteousnesse Hosea 2.19 and in judgement and in loving kindnesse and in mercies J will even betroth thee unto mee in faithfulnesse and thou shalt know the Lord. Now although this betrothing between Christ and the Church be in this life so that wee are Christs and Christ ours and dwels by faith in our hearts neverthelesse the marriage is not yet Now is the espousal time the marriage being differred to the end of the world For the bridegroom is yet as it were in a farre countrey viz. in the heavens neither is the bride as yet prepared because all the Elect that are to be gathered are not yet gathered
the like degree of glorie the which also some orthodoxe teachers to this day doe maintaine grounding their opinion on the words of Christ The just shall shine as the sunne Matt. 13.43 whose brightnesse surpasseth the bewtie of all other creatures Now however this be granted yet we may safely conclude a degree of glorie seeing that even the sun appears unto us some time more and some time lesse in brightnesse And I beleeve Jovinian did not denie a degree absolutely but denied the same in respect of merit The which we should understand more certainly were his bookes now extant howbeit we may probablie gather so much from the very reasons and grounds laid down by Hierom himself In the last place we see that no mā in this life cā come to that perfectiō or fulnes or is so nigh unto the kingdome of God but that he might be deprived thereof in case he should be left unto himself or be careles that is continues not faithfull in weldoeing And therfore we are admonished 1 Cor. 10.12 Rom. 11.20 If we stand to take heed least we fall and though we stand by faith yet not to be high minded but fear But if so be that some of the faithfull may let go their hold and loose the crowne where then is that plerophoria or full assurance of our salvation and perseverance of the elect of which Christ speaketh No man shall take my sheep out ●f my hand Ioh. 10.28 Mat. 24.24 Ioh. 16.33 It is impossible the elect should be seduced and therefore be of good cheare I have overcome the world I answer however Libertines and Sophisters doe hence draw such a conclusion yet it followes not For as Austin from this very place proveth the number of the elect is certaine and can neither be augmented or diminished For saith he if one receives it not except another loose it then the number is certaine And although these things are spoken unto the saintes who persevere as though it were uncertaine whither they should stand or not nevertheles it onely teacheth that we should not be wise above that which is meet but fear We are moreover to consider that as the promise so the exhortation is directed not onely to the pastor but also unto the whole Church in which there is alwayes a mixture of saintes and hypocrites of elect and reprobates who indeed with the mouth make confession of faith but beleeve not with the heart unto righteousnesse and therfore are said to be deprived of the crowne because they hold not fast that which they have that is that which they seem to have According to that in Luk. 8.18 Whosoever hath not from him shall be taken even that which hee seemeth to have And therefore when such fall away and loose the crowne it nothing weakens the state of election 1 Ioh. 2.19 for as the Apostle witnesseth they are not in the number of the elect they went out from us but they were not of us for if they had beene of us they would no doubt have continued with us c. Vnto them therefore that of the Apostle is to be applyed Let him which seems to stand take heed least he fall thou standest by faith be not high minded but feare which threatnings are manifestly spoken of highminded hypocrites such as stand in outward appearance onely But the salvation of the elect is sure because they are kept by the power of God through faith and in humilitie of minde they shall certainely hold fast that which they have and never be cast off But you will say if this Bishop as undoubtedly he was were one of the elect what need then was there of this threatning that no man take thy crowne seeing the elect cannot fall away or be deprived thereof I answer It is not in vaine First though indeed the elect cannot loose the crowne in respect of the decree of God by which they are predestinated and called unto salvation yet might it be taken away in respect of their owne infirmitie if they were left unto themselves and in respect of other causes also which threaten their destruction except they were preserved by that power of which Peter speaketh 1 Pet. 1.5 Secondlie these threatnings as they respect the faithfull are conditional Another shall take their crowne if they persevere not in the faith but they doe persevere 1 Because God keeps them unto the end 2 Because Christ doth continuallie pray for them that their faith faile not And 3 because they themselves always pray for the same Ier. 32.40 and are heard according to that promise I will put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from mee that is as Augustine interprets it they shall persevere and cleave unto me And lastly because the Lord by such threatnings exhortations stirres up the saintes in their indeavour unto perseverance Vnto all which we may adde the testimonies of Thomas Hierom Bede Haimo and others whom Ribera citeth See Bell. Castigatum lib. 2. de Grat. Et lib. cap. 13. pag. 334. c. Him that overcommeth In the conclusion a reward of victorie is promised unto the spiritual champions who warre under Christs banner and to the same is annexed the common Epiphonema wherin as formerlie the diligent consideration of this Epistle is recommended unto them The severall rewards mentioned doe illustrate the excellencie of the crowne proposed Now it is propounded unto all yea even unto us if we overcome which thing we doe when we keep faith and a good conscience and persevere constantly under the crosse in the word of God And this is the onely way to overcome but cannot be effected without great labour in resisting opposing and putting to flight all enemies whatsoever Such therfore as eyther fight not at all or els doe it slacklie or perfidiously fall away they neyther overcome nor obtaine the crowne of life and so unto them these promises doe not appertaine Let us therfore in consideration hereof constantly fight the battels of the Lord. And so we come to treat of the rewards which are cleare in themselves though metaphorically propounded in a threefold promise I will 〈◊〉 him a pillar in the house of my God The temple of God is the church militant and triumphant The pillars serve both for strength and ornament unto the temple first therefore he promiseth to him that overcommeth that he shal be a glorious and firme member of the Church triumphant The Apostles are called pillars of the Church militant Gal. 2.9 foundation thereof Eph. 2.20 not as sustaining the Church for that is proper to Christ alone but as choise instruments in Gods hand by whom he founded preserved propagated the same Others suppose the phrase to be taken from the custome of the Romans who used to set up pillars that is trophees and images of honour now in this sence it might be taken but that Christ saith not I will set him up as a pillar but I
foure Monarchies with the diverse conditions of the Church militant under them and for this cause they are said to have severall formes or faces but the following thanksgiving little sutes with worldly monarchies Others referre it to the foure principall mysteries of faith If the foure mysteries of faith The mysterie of Christs incarnation to the face of a man His passion and death to the forme of an oxe as bearing our iniquities and because he was sacrificed for us His resurrection to a Lyon even the Lyon of the tribe of Iuda overcoming death And lastly by his ascension he resembles the flying Eagle To be short Whither foure principal Angels there are some who expound this place of foure principall Angels alluding to the beasts in Ezechiel which shadowed out as they say so manie Angels But this cannot be For 1 the Angels are manifestly distinguished from these beasts Chap. 7.11 Againe because these together with the Elders sing prayses to the Lambe Chap. 5.9 Thou hast rede med us to God by thy blood and hast made us to our God kings priests which argues they were men and not Angels But not to use many words They are the Church of the New Testament Even as the foure and twenty Elders typifie the Church of the Patriarchs and Prophets so the foure beasts shadow out the Apostolicall Church triumphing with Christ in heaven So then the Elders are types of the legal and the beasts of the Evangelicall Church both gloriously raigning with Christ But why doe these appeare before the throne because as the thanksgiving and following visions manifest this is the second apparition and serves for a twofold use in this heavenly sight not onely for the making up of the celestiall harmonie but also to beare a speciall part with the companie of Elders thorow out the visions The different forme of the foure beasts Why the formes of the beasts are diverse doth signifie the gathering of the Church of the New Testament from the foure corners of the world consisting of diverse nations and peoples and tongues wheras the foure and twenty Elders are uniforme because the Church under the Law consisted onely of the Iewish nation And in the midst of the Throne After what manner they stood and round about the throne There seems to be a difficulty in this how they could stand in the midst of the throne and in the circuit of the throne Some doe thinke that they so stood and held up the throne like as the twelve oxen did underprop the brazen sea in Solomons temple which was so set upon them that all their hinder parts were inward 1 King 7.25 But that cannot bee for then these beasts should have stood immoveable wheras on the contrarie we read that oftentimes they fell downe and worshipped the Lambe yea one of them Chap. 15.7 gave unto the seven Angels seven vials full of the wrath of God c. Ribora supposeth that three of them were round about the Throne but the fourth namely the Eagle beeing lifted up above the rest flew within the circuit thereof but there is no use to strive about this thing as if there were a mysterie in it For in the midst 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not denote a mathematicall centre but according to our common expression a neernesse and in this place is put for about or close by as I send you as sheep in the midst of wolves Satan came in the midst that is as it is translated among the sonnes of God So these foure beasts were about or neare the throne even nearer then the Elders as beeing before them in dignitie That which is added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and about the circuit of the throne doth note there standing to be such as that they were round about the sides of the throne as it were touched the same So that here the copulative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And is declarative Full of eyes before and behinde The like is said of the living creatures in Ezekiel By their eyes is signified the wachfulnes and singular in-sight of teachers for it behoveth them to have as it were Argos eyes that they may be able to feed the sheep looke well to the things committed to their charge search the scriptures and keep off ravenous wolves from the flock Thus by this heavenly forme is set forth what they had been and also how all other teacher ought still to be qualified here on earth And the first beast was like a Lyon The shape likewise of every beast is agreeable to the vision in Ezechiel onely there each living creature had foure faces wheras here each of them hath but one The diversity of their formes denoteth the diversity of gifts in teachers as a Lyon their fortitude and courage an Oxe their labour and patience a Man their understanding and prudencie And lastly the Eagle their quicknesse and sharpenesse of sight Now for other mysteries from this place I thinke it not meet for men to seeke further But if any one be prodigal of his time and desires to read more of these Elders and beasts he may if it be not too tedious unto him read Alcasar on this booke from page 339. unto page 398. And the foure beasts The first part of this verse containes a description of the beasts the latter a beginning of the thanksgiving Now because the fourth is compared unto an Eagle he therfore attributes unto every one of them sixe wings full of eyes before and behinde which is taken out of the vision of Isay Isai 6.2 where the use of so many wings is recorded for otherwise we se that birds need not more then two to fly withall The Seraphims are said to fly with two wings with other two they cover their faces as not beeing able to behold the majesty of God And with two they cover their feet that nothing unbeseeming the divine majesty might appeare about them In that their wings are full of eyes Why their wings are full of eyes it denotes that full and perfect light or knowledge which the Church enjoyeth with God in the heavens Thus we have heard the description of the foure beasts and it is as I said before the second apparition or cōpanie singing prayses to God to the Lambe as here so also in Chap. 5.8 7.11 19.14 and as being ministers to God publishers of the following visions See Chap. 6. v. 1.3.5.7 15.17 c. And they rest not day and night Now he shewes what was don both by the beasts and by the Elders the beasts incessantly worship God The Elders rysing from their seats fall downe before him that sits on the throne and worship him casting their crownes before the Throne singing prayses together with the beasts This is the thanksgiving wherewith the Church triumphant doth for ever celebrate God in the heavens The harmony is the consenting voyce of all the Prophets and Apostles This is that excellent and most sweet accord of all the saintes with
preserve them safe unto himself and hath done so these thousand years Parallel of Act fourth Chap. 6. v. 14.15.16.17 The Antichristian adversaries trembling for fear of Gods judgements shall cry with a horrible howling Mountaines fall on us who can stand because of the wrath of God the Lamb Chap. 7. v. 9. unto the end The martyrs all the blessed sealed ones formerly afflicted in the world now enjoy eternall felicity and stand before God the Lamb singing with joyfull harmonie salvation to our God for God will protect them and the Lamb will feed them By which double antithesis or contrarie position the coherence doth appeare as also hereby we understand both the consolation of the Church militant under Antichrist as of the Church triumphant in the heavens After this I saw The transitory particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shewes that this is a different Act from the former therefore these words After this doe denote not onely the order of the vision but also the future time in which it was done Before indeed he saw a great companie which were sealed but afterward he sees this innumerable multitude Moreover the former were sealed viz. during the persecutions of Antichrist on earth but these latter sung a hymne to wit after the enemies were cast into utter darkenesse and the Church taken up into glory Furthermore five things are recorded concerning this multitude 1. Who how great where what manner of multitude it was v. 2.2 What they did they prayse God and the Lamb. v. 10.11.12 3. Who they were The martyrs faithfull before sealed v. 13.14 4. What their happinesse was ver 15.16 5. The cause of this their great felicitie v. 17. A great multitude which no man c. This multitude is a figure of the new triumphant Church so that it consisted both of the soules which Iohn erewhile saw under the altar namely who in this world had fought the good fight of faith from the time of the Apostles for the space of 600 yeeres as also the hundred fourty and four thousand sealed ones preserved by Christ during the troubles and commotions of THAT MAN OF SIN from the sixhundreth yeere unto the end of the world This multitude is great innumerable as consisting of all the forenamed persons viz. both of the martyrs under the altar and of the hundred fourty and foure thousand sealed ones with all other of the faithfull from the Apostles time unto the last day 2 Tim. 2.19 The which number although it be small in comparison of them that perish and certaine and defined in respect of God who knowes who are his yet in it self it is great cannot bee reckoned by any creature Howsoever therefore the greater part shall follow the devill and cleave to Antichrist yet the Lord will have a great multitude and by such he will bee praysed for ever Of all nations Thus also the Church in Chap. 5.9 singeth unto the Lord Thou hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred tongue people and nation Hence we see that the sealed of the twelve tribes of Israel belong to this multitude otherwise they could not bee of every tribe nation So that here is represented the whole triumphant Church of the new Testament Stood before the Throne This shewes that they were in heaven and not on earth for this standing denotes their coelestiall happinesse which consisteth in the perpetuall vision of God the Lambe The queen of Sheba counted Solomons servants happie in that they alwayes stood before Solomon and heard his wisdome but how much greater is the happines of the Saintes in heaven who continually behold the majesty and glory of God and Christ Now this standing of the Saintes is opposed to the dreadfull cry of reprobates who can stand Clothed with white robes Their heavenlie purity brightnesse and glorie is here set forth For the just shall shine as the stars of heaven Hence againe it appeareth that the soules of the Martyrs to whom white robes were given Chap. 6.11 and to whom it was said that they should rest for a little season are joyned to this multitude beeing commanded to come forth from under the altar and placed before the Throne Moreover palms were given into their hands in signe of victorie For as Gregorie observeth these palms which the multitude held in their hands are nothing els but the reward of victorie following the workes of Martyrs Yet God forbid we should with Ribera attribute this reward to any meritorious worke seeing a far other meritious cause thereof is noted unto us ver 14. 17. 10. And cryed with a loude voyce Now followes what this multitude did they together with the Angels Elders Beasts that is with the whole assembly of the heavenly inhabitants sing joyfullie to God the Lambe This joy of the Saintes as I even now said is opposed to the howling of the ungodly under their plagues Mountaines fall on us Here therfore is signified the most certaine change of things as now they are joyfull indeed and desirable unto the godlie now under affliction but dolefull and cursed to the wicked now lifting up their hornes For it is a righteous thing with God saith Paul to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you 2 Thes 1.6 and to you who are troubled rest with us c. According as Abraham said to the glutton crying in hell Luk. 16.25 Son remember that thou in thy life time receivedst good things likewise Lazarus evill things but now he is comforted thou art tormented Salvation to our God This acclamation is not a wishing salvation as is the manner of subjects desiring prosperity to their prince to cry Let the king live but a shouting for joy a blessing of God and the Lambe for mans salvation or blessed immortality and happinesse It is I say no wish but an action of thanksgiving attributing to God that which is dew unto him namely the prayse and glorie of their salvation and the sence is we ascribe not our salvation received to our owne power but to the grace of God merits of the Lambe Therefore Beza to expresse this sence hath rendred the words thus salvation from our God and from the Lambe to wit is given unto us And thus Austin in his 11 sermon concerning the Saintes They sing with a loud voyce salvation to God who acknowledge with much thanksgiving that they have overcome in battle all fierie trials not by their owne power but by his assistance c. The joy therefore blessednesse of the Saintes in heaven shal be an eternal celebration of God of Christ 11. And all the Angels The rest also of the coelestial companie as the Angels Elders and beasts spoken of Chap. 4. doe joyne in singing with the blessed soules of the Martyrs sealed ones And fell before the throne on their faces A gesture of suppliants who humble themselves before the most
rage of Satan Antichrist against the preachers of the Gospell is livelie set forth Chap. 11. unto 15 ver The fourth last Act represents the victory of the triumphant Church and the last judgement in which the militant Church shal be at length freed from all troubles but the wicked who have caused destruction to the world shall now perish for ever from v. 15. of Chap. XI unto the end The Argument and parts of Chapter VIII THe seventh seal beeing opened after halfe an houres silence in heaven there appear seven Angels with seven trumpets But before they sound Christ comes forth with a golden censer offering the prayers of the Saintes upon the golden altar and then he casts the censer filled with fire upon the earth whence arise thundrings voyces lightnings and earthquakes Moreover four Angels sounding in order one after another many wonderfull and fearfull things come to passe At the first trumpet haile fire mingled with blood is cast on the earth whereby the third part of trees is burnt At the second a great mountain burning with fire is cast into the sea turning the third part of the sea into blood At the third a great star burning as a Lamp falleth from heaven upon the third part of the rivers and fountaines of water turning the third part of the waters into wormwood of which manie men died At the fourth the third part of the Sun is smitten of the Moon and of the Stars that they should not give light night nor day After these things an Angel flying through the midst of heaven denounceth wo wo wo to the inhabitants of the earth because of the three other trumpets following THe Chapter therefore containeth 1. The preparation to the third vision 2. Four parts of the vision it self or four soundings of the trumpets with their events unto the end of the Chapter The opening of the seventh seal And a preparation to the third vision 1 And when he had opened the seventh seale there was silence in heaven about the space of halfe an houre 2 And I saw the seven Angels which stood before God and to them were given seven trumpets 3 And another Angel came and stood at the Altar having a golden censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden Altar which was before the Throne 4 And the smoake of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand 5 And the Angel tooke the censer and filled it with fire of the Altar and cast it into the earth and there were voyces thunderings lightnings an earthquake 6 And the seven Angels which had the seven trumpets prepared themselves to sound THE COMMENTARIE 1. ANd when he to wit the Lamb had opened the seavouth seal Rupertus and some others will have this verse to belong to the former vision What is meant by the silence of half an hour understanding the silence here mentioned to be the tranquillity which followeth in heaven after the day of judgement to wit when the soules of the martyrs shal cease to cry for vengeance and the enemies shall no more afflict the Church But that tranquillity shall not bee as here it is said for half an hour but perpetually Others there was silence in heaven that is the Church had a little breathing or freedom from persecution for after Constantine suddenly followed the Arian persecution against the orthodox verity under Constans Iulian Valens c. Anselmus some others applie the silence for the space of half an hour to the time that shal be between the death of Antichrist and the day of judgement which as they say shal be five and fourty dayes To which purpose Ierome seemeth to speake somwhat in his commentarie on Dan. Chap. 12. But this fiction Ribera justly disapproves of albeit there is little waight in his reason Because saith hee that time shal be so quiet as that the wicked casting of all fear of evils to befall them shall live securely say peace peace according to that of Matt. 24.28 1 Thessa 5.1 but this is rather to confirme then any way to confute their opinion for this silence doth note tranquillity according to these interpreters Others suppose that the silence was in regard of the astonishment of the assembly in heaven admiring the weightinesse of Gods judgements set forth in this vision But considering that as yet they had neither seen nor known them how could they be astonished thereat For my part I seek for no mysterie in this silence but take it historically for a short space The Authors opinion in which the former vision beeing fully acted there was a cessation for a little while from further apparitions permission beeing graunted unto Iohn in the mean while to desist from contemplation of these high mysteries For the opening of the sixt seal concluded the foregoing vision of the last judgement After which at the opening of the seventh feal begins a new vision the which that it might plainely be differenced from the former there is silence for the space as it were of half an hour during which time the heavenly assembly ceased from their hymnes John prepared himself for to contemplate on new visions This stilnesse therfore is to bee referred to the order or decency of this apparitional Act and to mee there seemes to be no other mysterie in it 2. And I saw those seven Angels here begins the preparation it is twofold First appear seven Angels for to sound with seven trunpets v. 2. and 6. But before they sound comes forth an Angel with a golden censer casting the same upon the earth as acting the prologue and setting forth the argument of these trumpetters And I saw He sees againe seven Angels shewing themselves on the theatre to whom are given by him that sate on the Throne or by the Lamb Seven trumpets to sound withall And here we are to take notice of the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those seven to wit whom before he saw Chap. 4.5 5.6 Who stood that is their office was to stand before God as heraulds speedily to performe his commandements Or standing that is ministring and ready to sound with their trumpets For as the edicts of princes are published their festival dayes proclaimed and people or armies gathered together by the sound of the trumpet so these Angels by sounding doe publish the secret judgements of God set forth admirable events and provoke the adversaries to wrath and tumult Most interpreters understand by these Angels Who these sounding Angels are the preachers of the word whose office it is like trumpetters to proclaim the will of God unto men now indeed this may not unfitly bee applied to the first six of them but not to the seventh For without all doubt thereby is signified the Archangel with whose voice and trump the
celebrated viz. The joy of the Church and the mourning of the adversaries with the causes of both The great voyce that Iohn heard signifies the multitude of rejoycers and the greatnes of their joy because of the victorie From vers 11. it may be gathered that they were the saintes in heaven who acknowledge the Church militant for their brethren Therfore all the heavenlie companies sing togither excepting the third companie of Angels and the fourth of other creatures The proposition of their song is in vers 12. rejoyce yee heavens and yee that dwell in them In calling upon the heavens themselves to rejoyce they amplifie the excellencie of the benefit for great joy is caused by great mercies This Prosopopoeja is often used as afterward in Chap. 19.20 so in Isa 1.2 heare ye heavens And yee that dwell in them that is the Angels of heaven whom they invite to rejoyce with them The arguments of their joy are the worthie benefits of the victorie which are three in number as we shewed in the analysis The first is that by this victorie comes salvation and strength and the kingdom of our God and the power of his Christ The like benefits were set forth in the foregoing vision at the sounding of the seventh Angel Cha. 11.15 but arising from a different cause There the dwellers in heaven rejoyced for the finall judgement and destruction of Antichrist and other adversaries here they exult for the first victorie of Michael against the Dragon by which is come salvation and strength c Now howsoever God and Christ had this evermore before yet the same appeared not so fullie because of the wickeds rage and tumult the which they seemed to winke at But then they openlie declared their power c. When Michael that is Christ by his death resurrection and exaltation brake the power of the Dragon and cast him to the earth Besides they had it not alwayes for us that is for our help and consolation But at last it came to bee ours and for us through the victorie of Michael For it is to be observed that they say not these things came to God and to Christ but that now the salvation and power of God and of Christ was come that is was gotten given and communicated to us For through Christs victorie the salvation of our God is come viz. unto us from our God Then the power of our God did manifest it self when it drew us as a lost prey out of the Dragons jawes Then Gods kingdom became ours when we beeing delivered out of the power of darkenesse Colos 1.13 Rom. 1.4 were translated into the kingdome of his beloved Son Then Christs power became ours when he having over come death and Satan was declared to be the son of God powerfullie according to the spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead This is the first argument of joy to the heavenlie spirits and to us in regard that our salvation is founded in the victorie of Michael and that the power and kingdome of our God is vindicated from the violence of the Dragon Our God so they call him that we might confidentlie trust that by this victorie God is reconciled unto us Ioh. 16.33 for so Christ bids us saying bee of good cheere I have overcome the world To this spiritual joy may also be added that outward rejoycing of Christians when Constantine the Emperour had driven the foresaid Dragons out of heaven to the earth Thus I say salvation strength kingdome and power of God and Christ did seeme to come when a Christian Emperour was set on the throne glorifyed God publickly maintained Christs power and freed the Church from tyrannie For the kingdome of God is visiblie seen as it were saith Brightman when godlie princes are placed at the stern The which indeed is true But here it is a secondarie sense For the accuser of our bretheren is cast down The second benefit of the victorie and argument of joy is the immunitie of the Godly from satans accusations Whom before he called a slaunderer adversarie and deceiver he now cals him our accuser It is an allusion to the court where the judge sitteth on the tribunal Satans Iudiciall action against sinners before whom is brought a guilty person with his accuser demanding his life This judge is God For he will judge the world in righteousnes and shall minister judgment to the people in uprightnes Before his tribunal we all stood guiltie of eternal death through sin Gods revenging justice stood against us requiring that we should suffer temporal and eternal punishments For what was committed by us against his infinite majesty Rom. 1.32 For it is the judgement of God that they who commit such things are worthie of death Against us stood the law of God pronouncing cursings against the transgressours thereof Our own evill conscience also arguing and convincing us of eternall guiltinesse But Christ our Michael pleaded our cause before God and by suffering death for our sakes most fullie satisfyed his justice and healed our wounded consciences from the sting of sin purging and sanctifying our harts through faith by his spirit Act. 15.9 Rom. 8.1 and therefore there is no condemnation to us who are in Christ Notwithstanding satan left not off to prosecute his action to accuse and blame us to stirre up God against us and to rage against the faithfull In that he is said to accuse us day and night before God it doth emphaticallie set forth satans malice he knowes God is ours that is reconciled unto us in Christ yet he impudently blameth us to make him if he could not to be ours But thankes be to God Michael hath cast this impudent railer out of heaven that hence forward he might no more molest the Lord with his lying accusations If this great benefit gave occasion of so great joy to the heavenly inhabiters then much more to us For the Dragon was not an accuser of them in heaven but of us who as yet walk in the slipperie pathes of this world Therefore they say The accuser of our bretheren to wit they who as yet have their warfare here on earth This is a worthie thing that the Church triumphant acknowledgeth us to be bretheren And indeed the Catholick or universall Church is a communion of all the Saintes both in heaven and in earth So Chap. 6.11 Hence first the doctrine of the Gospel touching free justification by faith is here confirmed For if our accuser bee cast out then certainlie Free justification by faith here established no man accusing us God the judge will not condemn but acquit and justifie them who by faith are in Christ Iesus It confirmes also the doctrine of the full assurance of our faith and salvation The full assurance of faith touching our salvation Rom. 8.33 For if Christ hath satisfyed Gods judgement for us and silenced our accuser then verely henceforward we may fullie perswade
City 1. It came not from the Sun or Moon 2. But from the glory of God and the Lamb ver 23. IV. The Citizens of the Citie 1. who they were The Nations that were saved and the Kings of the Earth that bring their glory unto it 2. The security and peace of the City from a signe The gates are not shut at all ver 25. 3. The glory of the Citie ver 26. 4. The puritie and holinesse of the City It shall consist of Elect onely no Reprobates enter therein ver 27. The Former Part of the CHAPTER The New Heaven and New Earth The Heavenly Ierusalem and its building 1. And I saw a new Heaven and a new Earth for the first Heaven and the first Earth were passed away and there was no more Sea 2. And I Iohn saw the Holy Citie new Ierusalem comming downe from God out of Heaven prepared as a Bride adorned for her husband 3. And I heard a great voyce out of Heaven saying Behold the Tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall bee his people and God himselfe shall be with them and bee their God 4. And God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes and there shal be no more death neither sorrow nor crying neither shall there be any more paine for the former things are passed away 5. And he that sate upon the Throne said Behold I make all things new And he said unto me Write for these words are true and faithfull 6. And hee said unto mee It is done I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end I will give unto him that is a thirst of the Fountaine of the water of Life freely 7. He that overcommeth shall inherit all things and I will be his God and he shall he my sonne 8. But the fearefull and unbeleeving and the abominable and murtherers and whoremongers and sorcerers and idolaters and all lyars shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the Second Death THE COMMENTARY ANd I saw a new Heaven We have heard of one part of the lāst Iudgement viz. the casting of the Adversaries into torments Lib. 20. de C. D. c. 16. In which saith AVSTIN he declared what was briefly spoken by the LORD And these shall go into everlasting punishment Now followes the second part the placing of the Elect in glory in which also is expounded what Christ there addeth And the just into life everlasting As the former did serve to strike a terrour into the ungodly so the latter to lessen the fear and sorrow of the godly and stir them up to alacrity and joy For seeing the Saints in this life are compassed about with innumerable calamities miseries no wonder though they should weare away with continuall sorrow and mourning But in this part of the Vision they are strengthned in their hope For at last there shal be a change of all things an end of all adversitie abundance of all good as Christ said Ioh. 16.20 Yee shall lament and mourn but your mourning shal be turned into joy The new Ierusalem is not the Church militant much lesse the Church of Rome How farre Alcasars opinion is approvable Wherefore after the wicked were judged Iohn saw a new Heaven and a new Earth Afterward a new Ierusalem glistering with gold and pretious stones That this latter is wholly allegoricall cannot be questioned by any although it be diversly expounded For some say it shadows out the magnificence of the Church Militant much spoken of by the Prophets yea there are some who specially applie it to the glory of the Romane Church in this world But Alcasar reproves both justly and giveth reasons that the Vision of the two Chapters is proper to the Church Triumphant Notwithstanding afterward foolishly contendeth that it is to be applied in speciall unto the glory of the Romane Church in Heaven Now this he doth not because hee thought it to bee true but to flatter the Pope it may be for the Cardinals hat sake and vex the hereticks as he pretendeth Which now I passe by Now to returne to the former againe Touching the new heaven and the new earth 2. Cor. 5.17 touching the new Heaven and the new Earth whither it be allegorically or properly to be understood Some understand it allegorically of the renewing of the world by Christ touching which the Apostle If any one be in Christ he is a new creature Old things are past away Behold I make all things new This Spirituall renovation began even from the preaching of the Apostles and is undoubtedly an allusion unto the Prophesie of Isaias Isa 65.17 Behold I create new heavens and a new earth c. which seems to be spoken of the new state of the Church in the Kingdom of Christ on earth and so BRIGHTMAN as I have shewed interprets it metaphorically of the renewed state of the Church through the conversion of the Iewes shortly to be accomplished But all these things cannot without violence be applied unto the state of the Church on earth The Chiliasts indeed applied it unto that golden age in which they dreamt they should voluptuously reigne a thousand yeeres with Christ on earth But this opinion is repugnant to the praedictions of Christ and the Apostles that the state of the Church in the last times shall not bee voluptuous or joyfull at all but sad and mournfull as above we shewed Therefore we are rather to understand the former touching the new heaven and the new earth properly What is meane by the new heaven the new earth for it is so evident that here is treated of the last Iudgement and the consequents thereof as it can scarcely be doubted of So that this new heaven and this new earth which Iohn saw after the judgement of the adversaries is that new heaven and that new earth which as the Apostle Peter expresly foretold 2. Pet. 3 10 is to be expected after the burning of the world For these heavens shall passe away with a great noyse and the Elements shall melt with servent heat the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up But we according to the promise looke for new heavens and a new earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse By which plainly we gather that a new heaven and a new earth is to bee looked for Historically and properly and here likewise it is so to be understood Hence also it followeth that the Oracle of Isaias touching the new heaven and the new earth is to be understood not onely metaphorically of the renewed state of the Church on earth but litterally also of the renovation of the world which shall be at the last day For Peter saith that wee looke for a new heaven and a new earth according to the promise Now this promise is no where else but in Isa 65.17 66.22 Therefore undoubtedly God by the Prophet speakes not
safety of the glorified Church is out of all danger that therefore there is no need of this wall For this very security is here signified by the Allegory of a wall And twelve gates In the wall gates are made for the Citizens and others to go out and in This wall hath twelve gates excellently placed guarded and beautified For all the gates have Guardians to keep them not men but Angels who are watchfull strong and unwearied Every one hath Emblems written on it the names of the twelve Tribes of Israel Three gates are ordered unto the severall corners of the world that there might bee most easie accesse from all parts unto the same By the Gates they understand the doctrine of the Gospell by which Heaven is opend unto us by the Angels the Patriarchs Prophets and Apostles who by their preaching have shewed us the way to Heaven and doe all belong unto this Citie By the names of the twelve Tribes written thereon they understand the full gathering of al the Elect of the Spirituall Israel into the same Three gates stand towards the East three to the North c. because this Church is gathered from all parts of the world Whether by the number of the Gates being three on each side of the wall bee a mysterie of the Trinitie as Andreas supposeth I neither know nor date affirme least according to the number of the Gates the number of the divine persons should be also multiplied It is more agreeable to observe here an Allusion unto the type of the holy Citie described by Ezechiel Chap. 48.30 for that also had twelve gates named after the Tribes of Israel viz. Three gates Northward One of Reuben one of Judah one of Levi. Three Eastward One of Ioseph one of Benjamin one of Dan. Three at the South One of Simeon one of Issachar one of Zebulon Three Westward One of Gad one of Asher one of Naphthali Now that Citie represents the Church Militant of the New Testament because all the Tribes of the spirituall Israel that is all the Elect from al the corners of the Earth were to be gathered unto the same Such also in this place is the representation of the Church Triumphant in Heaven 14. And the wall of the City He commends the strength of the wall from the foundations on which it was built For without a firme foundation a wall is ruinous and must needs decay The foundations he saith are twelve the pretious materials whereof are expounded ver 19. to wit so many pretious stones most firmely sustaining this wall and having the Names of the Apostles in them But Christ is the onely foundation holding and keeping up the Church 1. Cor. 3.11 neither can any other be laid c. How then are the Apostles foundations And if the Apostles be foundations then saith BRIGHTMAN this is not that Eternall Citie in the Heavens I Answer Why the names of the Apostles are written in the foundations Iohn saith not that the Apostles are foundations But that the names of the Apostles were written or graven on the foundations that is they were called after the names of the Apostles one being called Peters another Iohns c. Why so for honour sake because the Apostles in this Citie shall excell others in glory But why written in the foundations Because they by their preaching laid the onely foundation which is Christ For what Paul saith of himselfe As a wise Master-builder I have laid the foundation that every one of them could say also of himselfe Which is the reason that however the foundation bee but one yet he saith they are twelve according to the number of the twelve Apostles because that one Foundation was so fully laid by every one of them How there are twelve foundations as there might seem to be twelve foundations the same being as it were laid twelve times or by the twelve Apostles But why is Paul omitted seeing he laboured more then the twelve Because at first CHRIST chose twelve onely unto whom Paul was afterward added coming as it were into the labours of the rest But seeing the names are not expressed no one of the Apostles can be said to be omitted Of the Apostles of the Lambe Or of Iesus Christ for so the Apostles stile themselves in their Epistles 15. And he that talked Now also he describes the most ample and absolute figure of the Citie first shewing whence he received the exact knowledge therof viz. from the Angels measuring He that talked with me That is one of the Angels of the seven Vials who had said before unto me Come hither I will shew thee c. Had in his hand a golden Reed That is a measuring Instrument to mete the wall and gates like as Master-builders use to examine the whole building by a measuring rule whither all things do well agree Now the end of measuring was to make known the quantitie so as Iohn might precisely understand and describe unto us the most absolute figure of this mysticall City This also is taken out of Ezech. 40.5 where the Prophet saw the Architect Angell of the Church that is Christ with a measuring Reed of six Cubits and foure fingers to measure the Court of the new Temple and of the situation and of the City 16. The City is just fouresquare And the Citie lyeth foure-square The City he describeth to be just foure square which kind of forme is most solid constant and perfect because the longitude and latitude of all the parts is equall for this Citie equally consisteth of all the Elect wherefore hee denotes the immoveable firmenesse of the same The quantitie is 12000. Furlongs which make 375. Germane miles It is ambiguous whether this were the measure of the whole Circumference or of every of the sides or squares of the Citie If of the sides then the Circumference was 48000. Furlongs that is 1500. Germane miles but the whole Circumference seemes to be noted so that every side contained 300. Furlongs that is 93. Germane miles and three quarters Therefore this Ierusalem is far greater then Babylon of old The greatnesse of Babylon which as Herodotus describeth was foure square in Circumference 480. Furlongs that is fifteene Germane miles each side 120. Furlongs that is three Germane miles and three quarters It had also a great and high wall fiftie royall Cubits in thickenes and two hundred in height of Brick stone and morter But this City is much more magnificent and strong For Babylon was taken by Cyrus by Alexander and spoiled by divers adversaries But this is inaccessible and cannot be vanquished by any enemy but remaines stable for ever 17. And he measured the wall thereof Thus much of the Cities Circumference The measure of the wall was 144. Cubits Therefore hee rightly cals it a high wall which no adverse power can easily overcome Hereby saith Andreas is signified the fruitfulnesse of the doctrine of the Apostles for the measure of the wall is
worship hee sheweth that God himselfe and the Lambe shall bee for a temple unto it However therefore it hath no Temple of stone Marble or gold yet it shall not be destitute of a temple or performe no worship unto God for God himselfe and the Lambe shall be the temple of it And as now God is worshipped and praised with Hymnes and spirituall Songs in Temples So then all the Saints shall exult in God himselfe and in the Lambe himselfe with eternall praises Iubilees and Songs For then God shall be all in all because hee shall fill all things with joy and with his majesty Then shall the Saints worship before God and rejoyce in him without ceasing from one Sabbath unto another Isa 66.23 Rev. 7.25 as above he said They shall stand before the throne serving God day and night in his temple which temple is here shewed not to be materiall but God himself the meaning is In his temple for in God himselfe who shall be a temple unto them Mention also was made of the Coelestiall Temple in Chap. 11. ver 1. Chap. 15. ver 5. But that temple was onely visionall shadowing out the church-Church-Militant Notwithstanding that in Chap. 11. ver 19. And the temple of God was opened in Heaven we applied not unfitly to the triumphant-Triumphant-Church because it was the end of the third Vision touching the Catastrophe of all calamities In that he joyntly makes God and the Lambe to bee that one temple of the Saints XLIII Argument of Christs Deity it is a cleare Argument of Christs Deity For if Christ be the temple of all the Saints of necessity He must be immense omnipotent and infinitely good as God himselfe Now hence againe their opinion is overthrowne who interpret these things of the glory of the church-Church-Militant For neither the Church during her warfare in this life can no more be without a Temple or Church gathering then to want the outward ministerie it selfe 23. And the Citie had no need of the Sun neither of the Moone He expoundeth what in ver 11. he had said touching the light of the Citie In this life no Citie can subsist without the light of the Sunne and Moone But our Citie shall need neither because it shall enjoy a farre greater light the glory of God himselfe and of the Lambe that is that unapprochable light in which God dwelleth He doth not say that it shall have no Sun 1. Tim. 6.16 nor Moon but that it shall not need them to shine in it closely intimating that then indeed these lights shal be for neither shall the New Heaven be deprived of the ornament of the brightest stars which are now so glorious in this present Firmament yea according to that of Isaias Isa 30.26 the light of the Moon shal be like the light of the Sunne that now is and the light of the Sun shal be seven times more bright but then they shall not serve for use of light as now For there shal be no need of a created light when the increated light Gods immense majesty shall enlighten us Wherefore even as now the greater light doth obscure the lesser so then the glory of God shall darken the light of the Sunne and Moone Therefore the whole Citie shall shine continually with the immense light of divine majesty being subject to no change of dayes and nights which now the continuall risings and fallings of the Sun and Moone doe effect so as there is no Citie in the whole world no not under the Pole which hath alwayes light For although the Polarie Regions have the light of the Sun six months yet afterward the Sun going under the Horizon they are as many months in darknesse And the Lambe is the light thereof In the light also he joynes the Lambe unto God to shew that the majesty and glory of both is equall For however the Lambe in respect of his most glorious flesh shal bee under God Notwithstanding in the majesty of his Deity he shal be that one light of the Citie with the Father and the Holy Ghost Furthermore this place cannot be applied unto the Church Militant For she shall need and enjoy the light of the Sunne and Moone all the time of her warfare in this life But the contrary opinion appeares rather to be confirmed Isa 24.23 because al this seems to be taken out of the Prophesie of Isaias touching the illumination of the New Church under Christs Kingdome in this Life Then the Moone shall be confounded Isa 60.19 and the Sun ashamed when the Lord of Hosts shall reigne in Mount Sion and in Jerusalem And afterward The Sun shall be no more thy light by day neither for brightnesse shall the Moon give light unto thee but the Lord shall bee upon thee an everlasting light and thy God thy glory Thy Sun shall no more goe downe neither shall thy Moone with-draw it selfe for the Lord shall be thine everlasting light and the dayes of thy mourning shal be ended I ANSWER We must indeed confesse that the Prophet speaketh of excellent graces and of a glorious light of doctrine and knowledge that shal be under Christs Kingdome in the Church of the New Testament which light shal excell the shadowes of the types of the Old Testament like as the glory of God himselfe surpasseth the Sun and Moone so it is said figuratively The Sun shall shine no more in thee nor the Moone give light any longer unto thee because Iehovah shall be thy light for ever for the shadowes and types of Sacrifices and Burnt-Offerings shal be no more because Christ being exhibited who is as it were the Sunne of righteousnesse the New Church shall shine most gloriously beyond the Old in the knowledge of the Gospell and the mysteries of God by the pouring forth of the light of Gods Spirit upon all flesh But we deny that this is the full sense of these Prophesies For the Prophets almost in all their Oracles touching Christs Kingdome prophesie not onely of the Inchoation but also of the Consummation of the glory thereof Otherwise the fulfilling but of very few of them could bee shewed in this Life And this chiefly bewitcheth the Iews in that they seeke and expect a literal accomplishment of the Prophesies touching the Kingdome of the Messias in this world not observing that the Prophets with the beginnings of this Life in which the glory of Christs Kingdome is onely begun joyne also the full accomplishment which shal be at last in the life to come Therefore the Oracles of Isaias touching the abolishing of the light of the Sunne and Moone although they bee now figuratively fulfilled yet the literal accomplishment thereof shal be at last in the Church gloriously reigning in Heaven And therefore they are rightly applied unto the illumination of this City in Heaven Neither are the Arguments for this opinion obscure in the Prophesies themselves For saith the Prophet Iehovah shall be upon thee an
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-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-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
will make him a pillar But it is more probable that he alludeth to the two brazen pillars set up by Solomon in the porch of the temple which typified the stability of the children of God And he shall goe no more out This is the second promise it shall not bee a momentanie glorie but unchangeable perpetuall and eternall And it seemes to be put heere in opposition to those brazen pillars which were overthrowen with the temple by the Babylonians but no such destruction shall befal the godly for as the Psalmist speaketh Psal 125.1 2. They that trust in the Lord shall be as mount Sion which cannot be removed but abideth for ever An excellent place proving the perseverance of the saintes even in this life for whom Christ hath once made a pillar in his temple he will never suffer them to go out any more that is to fall away from the state of grace And I will write his name The third promise An inscription of a threefold name is an inscription of a threefold name viz. of God of the citie of God and of Christ He seemes eyther to allude to the manner of the Romanes who used to write on their statues of triumph the actions of the Conquerours the titles and names of conquered nations as for example To Tyberius To Constantine alwayes Augustus To the Conquerour of Germanie of the Gothes of Africa c. Or otherwise he keepes still to the former allusion of Solomons pillars whereof the right was called Jachin which is beeing interpreted he will establish and the left Boaz that is in it there is strength the one beeing a type of the Jewish church the other of the Gentiles so Christ will write upon every faithfull man most honourable names which exposition might stand but that Solomon is said not to have written those names upon the pillars but so to have named them Well how ever it be certaine it is that both these pillars with their names were destroyed the vain inscriptions of the Romanes perished but the names which Christ will write upon his pillars they shall remaine for ever and ever First he will write upon them the Name of his God not that these conquerours shal be Gods but the sons of God that is perfectly borne againe after the image of God Indeed we are now Gods children by faith but these glorious inscriptions here promised doe not yet appeare namely the full fruition and majestie of our adoption And the name of the citie of my God or of the new Jerusalem that is I will make him an everlasting citizen of the Church triumphant for as you may see Chap. 21.2.10 this is set forth unto us by the new Ierusalem Which commeth downe out of heaven both because it so appeared in a vision unto Iohn in the place for calledged as also because it hath its true original from heaven as grounded on the eternal election of God and besides in this life is borne of water and of the spirit and all the grace which it receiveth commeth downe from above From my God Three times he calleth God his God speaking eyther as man and our mediatour whose office no wayes lessneth but rather confirmeth his eternall essence see Chap. 1.1 3.2 Io. 20.17 1 Thess 1.3 Christs new name Or els God is here personallie taken for the father as it is in these places I ascend to my God and to my Father Before God and our Father My new name To the Godlie in Pergamus he promised a new name but lo here he will give his new name which he receyved of his father beeing exalted above everie name that is named not onely in this world but also in that which is to come Eph. 1.10 see also Phil. 2.19 Touching this new name it signifies Christs glorious exaltation and the Fathers setting of him at his right hand after his resurrection now this his new name and this fulnesse of glorie at Gods right hand Christ will write on the Overcommers but how make them pertakers of perfect happinesse according to their measure and proportion as beeing members of that bodie of which he is the head Se more of this v. 21. 13 He which hath an eare see Chap. 2. v. 7.11 The VII Epistle to the Bishop of Laodicea 14 And unto the Angel of the Church of the Laodiceans write These things saith the Amen the faithfull and true witnesse the beginning of the creation of God 15 I know thy workes that thou art neither ●old nor hote I would thou wert cold or hote 16 So then because thou art luke-warme and neither cold nor hote I will spue thee out of my mouth 17 Because thou sayest I am rich and increased with goods and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable and poore and blind and naked 18 I counsell thee to buy of me gold tryed in the fire that thou majest be rich and white raiment that thou mayest be clothed and that the shame of thy wikednesse doe not appeare and anoint thine eyes with eye salve that thou mayest see 19 As many as I love I rebuke and chasten bee zealous therefore and repent 20 Behold I stand at the doore and knocke if any man heare my voice and open the doore I will come in to him and will sup with him and he with me 21 To him that overcommeth will I grant to sit with me in my Throne even as I also overcame and am set downe with my Father in his throne 22 Hee that hath an eare let him heare what the Spirit saith unto the Churches THE COMMENTARIE VNto the Angel of the church of the Laodiceans This last epistle is full of sharpe reproofe against the pastor of the Church because of his great hypocrisie and vaine boasting and withall shewes him what he should doe perswades him to serious repentance and propounds rewards unto them that doe the same In this Epistle is excellentlie set forth the lenity and forbearance of Christ our Lord by which he suffereth hypocrites and desireth their salvation It consisteth of a preface a narration and a conclusion To the Angel That is to the pastor whole congregation Now because the evils in the Church doe usually proceed from the pastors therfore it is justly imputed unto them even as the excesse Idolatrie prophanenes and other wickednes of the people were by the prophets of old laid to the charge of their priests and governours It is uncertaine who this Bishop was But certainly he was a carnal and craftie man for though he bare the name of a minister yet was he void of sinceritie and Godlines and given over to coveteousnes and luxury other vices Paul twise mentioneth this Church in his Epistle to the Collossians chap. 2.2 there he wisheth that their harts may be comforted c. and Chap. 4.16 he commandeth that their Epistle be read of the Laodiceans The Epist to the Laodic Apocrypha Vide Bibl. S.
Andreas well observeth And voyces Namely the terrible voyces of thundrings and lightnings This is spoken appositively for thunder is the voyce of Iehovah shaking the earth terrifying the ungodlie The voyce of Jehovah maketh the desert to quake Psal 29.8 which teacheth how terrible and inaccessible the seat of God is In Chap. 10.3 these thundrings are said to be seven and to utter their voyces wherein there is an allegory as shall be shewed on the place And soven lamps Namely were or stood before the throne of God these are interpreted by John himself to be the seven spirits which he calleth the seven Angels standing before God Alluding to the vision of Zacharie Chap. 4. where the seven lamps on the golden candlesticke v. 2. are v. 10. called the eyes of Iehovah which run to and fro through the whole earth Signifying by eyes the Angels who are as it were the eyes feet and hands of God which is spoken after the manner of men like as Constables and Sergeants are said to be the eyes hands and feet of the magistrate because by them he performeth and knoweth all things that are don in the city The like allusion is in Chap. 5.6 where the eyes of the lambe are the seven spirits of God sent forth into all the earth But of this more in its place Also before the throne The third apparition about the throne is the sea of glasse like unto Chrystall Which sea some of the ancient and they which follow them will have to bee the sacrament of Baptisme said to be of glasse as Lyra supposeth because of its puritie and like to Chrystall because of its character which can never be blotted out Let them who will make use of this interpretation But neither Ribera nor my self do approve thereof Alcasar also judgeth that it cannot bee applied but with violence unto the sacrament of Baptisme Andreas Cesariensis understandeth it of the multitude of Angels and heavenlie powers Others suppose it hath an allusion unto Solomons brazen sea and that the materiall alteration of brasse into glasse which one may see through doth denote the difference betwixt the Law and the Gospell but these allegories will not hold The interpretation therefore of Ribera is more probable applying it to the multitude of men living on the earth who are compared to the sea of shining glasse because the sea is a gathering of many waters by which peoples and nations are signifyed Chap. 12.15 and they are shining because the counsels and the most secret actions of men are before the throne and open to the eyes of God beeing like the clearest chrystall discerning all things Bullinger before Ribera is yet more cleare The sea saith he before the Throne resembling glasse and Chrystall in brightnes and perspicuity signifies this fraile world which is allwayes in Gods sight For the holie scriptures doe type out unto us by the sea in regard of its instabilite noyse and tumultuousnes the mutability and inconstancie of this present world the state thereof beeing more fraile then glasse This exposition I well approve of as beeing indeed most probable As for Alcasars fiction in applying it unto his devised sacrament of Confession it is both a violent and a false wresting of the text So then the sea signifies the world which is said to be before the throne because the same shal be judged by Christ The world indeed doth swell rage against the saintes but it is as fraile as glasse or Chrystall whose waves are easilie broken and held in by the powerfull hand of the Lord. Now this thing is here inserted both for the comfort of John and the whole Church In this sence also and for the same end it is said in Chap. 8.8 the great mountaine burning with fire was cast into the sea Chap. 15.2 they that had overcome the beast are said to stand upon the sea of glasse of which more in its place And in the midst of the throne The fourth apparition about the throne are the foure beasts differing in forme but having eyes before and behinde and each of them sixe wings Alluding to the foure beasts in Ezechiel Chap. 1. And therefore ancient and moderne writers for the most part Whither the foure beasts type out the foure Evangelists understand by them the foure Evangelists which are commonlie expressed and painted in these formes Matthew in the likenesse of a man Mark of a Lyon Luke of an Oxe and Iohn of a flying Eagle Irenaeus applies it to the foure Gospels But Lyra refutes this from the order here observed because the face of a man appropriated to Matthew is here put in the third place he therefore here understands the foure Patriarchal Churches viz. Hierusalem Antioch Alexandria Constantinople But if so where then in the mean time was Rome did she not at all appeare in heaven He tels us she was comprehended under one But which of them or how it was he sheweth not neither indeed could he Besides the old writers doe not agree about the tipes of the beasts in applying them to the Evangelists The common opinion is that Matthew should be the man and Mark the Lyon Lib. 1. de consensu Evang. cap. 6. but Austin Bede will have the contrarie The reason alleadged why Matthew is likened to a man is because he begins his Gospel from the generation of Christ according to his manhood Againe Marc to a Lyon in regard he begins from the preaching of the Baptist crying like a Lyon in the wildernesse so Luke to an Oxe beginning his Gospel with the sacrifice of Zacharie Iohn is the flying Eagle in writing high and great mysteries of Christs divinity But what soliditie there is in these things let others judge It is tedious to set downe their reasons why these beasts should appeare in foure diverse formes First as a Lyon because say they God under the Law of nature shewed his glorie immediately unto the fathers Secondly as an Oxe because the Lord then required such beasts to be offered in sacrifice Thirdlie as a man because the son of God was made man Fourthly as an Eagle because the holy Ghost descending from heaven causeth the righteous to fly upward Ribera maintaining the common opinion Commen in Apoc. 4. num 39. answereth Lyras objection concerning the change of the order here That the common exposition observes the order of writing But Iohn the things according to their manifestation for the Baptist began to preach before Christ But this is to abuse the reader besides how could Iohn see the foure Evaugelists in the heavens he beeing himself one of them here then present upon earth To this Ribera answers That John saw those things which long after his death were to come to passe But this seems to contradict the text forasmuch as he saw the foure beasts which were then in heaven as also the foure and twenty Elders that is the Church triumphant with Christ Some interpret this of the
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
insufficient to reveale these heavenly secrets there is I say no wisedome in the creature to apprehend the counsels of God much lesse to make them known unto others This honour appertaines to the Lambe onely 4. And I wept much The third circumstance is Iohns weeping griefe occasioned from his desire to know what was written in the booke He saw it made fast with many seales he heard the Angel proclaiming the opening thereof Whence he concludes that therin was contained many worthy things necessarie to be known but seeing all creatures were silent as unable to open it he weeps much and good cause too Now his weeping was not in vaine for by his prayers teares he hath his desire granted him to the ful And here we are taught that the mysteries contained in Gods word whither in this or other places are not to be understood without weeping that is desire study labour and ardent prayers unto God The which shall not bee in vaine for though we may be ignorant of somethings yet what soever is necessarie to salvation shal be revealed unto every one that truely seekes for it at the hands of God 5 Then one of the Elders The fourth circumstance concerneth the Elder comforting John whom some wil have to be Jacob the patriarch others John the Baptist others Matthew but Lyra will have it to be Peter the porter of heaven but I passe by these fooleries He was one of the heavenlie companie and in likelihood one who sate next to him wishing him to desist from weeping for howbeit all creatures fayled yet there was one viz. Christ worthy to open the booke loose the seales Shewing us that all ought to direct their prayers unto Christ not unto the saintes He cals him the Lyon of the tribe of Judah alluding to the words of Iacobs blessing Judah is a Lyons whelpe viz. in dignity strength kinglie power Gen. 49 9. Of the tribe of Judah For Christs mother was of this tribe The root of David comming of the progeny of David for Marie the mother of Christ was the daughter of David Christ therfore as he is man is of the seed of David as again he himself witnesseth Cha. 22.16 I am the root and the off-spring of David He also is the Lyon of the tribe of Iudah conquering by his divine power satan death hell Hath prevailed Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath overcome which is eyther absolutly put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was found worthy Beza hath obtained or transitivelie for XXVII Argum of Chr. deity he hath excelled all creatures in dignity power Which is an excellent argument of the person and office of Christ Of his person both that he is true man beeing of the root of David and true God because he hath overcome Of his office that he is the onely mediatour revealer of the secrets of God and not onely the Doctor of the Church but also the redeemer therof as we shall heare by by Thus we see how he admits of no creature with him into the society of this function whosoever therfore substitutes any other mediatours together with the Lamb herein they make this mighty Angel a liar who proclaimeth that neither in heaven nor in earth or under the earth any creature is found worthy to open the booke of God 6 And I beheld and lo in the midst of the throne This is the fift circumstance touching the Lamb. His seat gesture forme is described in this verse his action in the following Now without doubt Christ is represented by this Lambe Before he was called a Lion because of his dignity and power here a Lamb noting his innocencie and oblation For he was brought as a Lamb to the slaughter Isai 53 7. as a sheep before her shearers is dumbe so he openeth not his mouth And indeed nothing els was typed out by the two Lambs daylie offered under the Law Ioh. 1.29.36 1 Pet. 1.19 but Christs perpetual and effectuall sacrifice For he is the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world And by whose pretious blood we are redeemed By the way we may take notice that Christ is here called a Lamb Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without an article And yet not any Lamb but onely Christ is to be understood hereby Which confutes their opinion who thinke because in Chap. 13.12 Antichrist is said to have two hornes like a Lamb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without an article that therefore not Christ but indefinitely any Lamb is there spoken of Neither is the rule among Graecians always true viz. Whensoever any certaine individual is noted that then an article is allwayes required For we see here the contrary as also in Chap. 14 1. where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lambe is put without an article which cannot be understood of any but of Christ This Lamb he saw in the midst of the throne and of the beasts that is between God and the Church triumphant shewing that he is the mediatour betwixt God and man In Chap. 7.17 he is said to stand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the midst of the throne whereby is signified his exaltation at the right hand of God For howsoever in the state of his humiliation he was lower then the throne yet now beeing glorified he hath obtained to sit on the throne of the Father And therefore he saith Chap. 3.24 To him that overcometh I will grant to sit with me in my throne even as I also overcame and am sit downe with my Father in his throne In the middest of the beasts See Chap. 4. v. 3.6 Stood as it had been slaine The gesture of the Lamb is twofold He stood and as it were slain By the latter his death is signified by the former his resurrection He appeares not slain but as if he had been slain not dead but living having the markes of his death in his side hands feet Wherefore he stood as a conquerour revived from death to life having like a Lion overcome the same Therefore he saith Chap. 1.18 I am hee that liveth and was dead and behold I live for evermore Wherefore we must not looke upon him simply as a Lamb but respectivelie as a Lamb slain for our sins and raised againe to life for our justification Furthermore his appearing in the forme of a Lamb doth not contradict what we spake before touching his sitting on the throne for he is a Lamb in regard of his humiliation and office and he is God and sits with the Father in the throne in respect of his deity Having seven hornes An admirable forme for who ever saw a Lamb with seven hornes having eyes in or under every one of thē But is seven here to be taken indefinitely for many No but properly answering to the number of the sevē seales To teach us that the Lamb wanted neyther power nor wisedome to unloose the same His hornes denote
God with censers but these with vials Which are the prayers of the saintes Their prayers are called vials by a twofold trope First by a Synechdoche for the odours in the vials And secondly by a metonymical denomination or els a metaphorical translation as signifying the prayers of the saintes For as persumes ascend upward and give forth a sweet smell so the saints in prayer seeke after heavenly things and the same is acceptable unto God They are golden vials because as gold excels in puritie so prayers proceeding from a pure hart are precious to the Lord what their prayers are now followes 9. And they sung a new song Both Companies of the Church triumphant with a most sweet accord prayse the Lamb the redeemer which proveth that these beasts and Elders are not Angels but men redeemed by the blood of Christ It shewes also unto us the consent of both covenants in the point of salvation For all the Patriarchs Prophets and Apostles together acknowledge the Lamb their redeemer Act. 10.43 According to that of the Apostle To him give all the Prophets witnesse that through his name whosoever beleeveth in him shall receive remission of sins And againe Act. 15.11 we beleeve that through the grace of the Lord Iesus Christ we shall be saved as the fathers For in him all the promises are yea and Amen 2 Corinth 1.20 Furthermore those prayers of the saintes Psal 40.4 96.1 97.1 144.9 149.1 caried here by the Elders in their golden vials are to be understood as their owne and not the prayers of others It is called a new song that is most singularly setting forth the great rare and excellent benefits of the Lambe For generally in the Psalmes a new song is taken in this sence The former Hymne Chap. 4.8 was sung unto him that sate on the throne but this is a song unto the Lamb. So Chap. 14.1 the saintes in heaven sing a new song unto the Lamb which none could learn but these hundred fourty and four thousand which had his fathers name written in their foreheads The argument therefore of this song is new because it is most excellent and containes the new benefits of Christ Thou art worthy They acknowledge him alone worthy to take the booke and to open the seales because they both know and confesse with all reverence that he is the onely mediatour of the Church and that the cause of this his great worthinesse is in the preciousnes of his blood For thou wast slaine that is by dying for the sins of the world thou declarest thy self to be the Messias Chap. 53. whō Isaiah foretold should be led as a sheep to the slaughter to take away the sins of the world Here we are taught that the mediatour ought both to be slaine for us that is to merit and also to take the booke that is meritoriously to bestow life and righteousnes upon others Seeing therefore he onely merited by his sacrifice it must necessarily follow that none else could take the booke that is reveale the counsell of God to the Church and by his power give salvation unto her And thou hast redeemed us to God by thy blood Now the Church triumphant prayseth the Lambe and applyeth the price of her redemption with the effects thereof unto her self Thus we ought so to acknowledge the benefits of Christ as to make them our owne not onelie in beleeving that he hath redeemed others by his blood and made them kings and priests to God but our selves also for true justifying faith is accompanied with a certaine perswasion of our own salvation I live saith the Apostle by the faith of the son of God who loved me Gal. 2.24 and gave himself for me Hence we observe two things First that the death of Christ is truly a ransome satisfactorie for our sins and that our redemption by it is not metaphorical as the new Samosatenians blasphemouslie affirme but proper for the redemption which is made by a price is proper But such is ours by Christ because by the shedding of his blood he hath paid a full ransome and satisfied the justice of God as the scripture witnesseth Matt. 20.28 and 1 Tim. 2.6 beeing the same with what is here said thou hast redeemed us by thy blood and ●hap 1.5 who hath washed us in his blood and Heb. 1.3 purged our sins by himself unlesse that by the word redemption is properly signified the whole worke of our salvation by washing and purging a part thereof viz. our justification or sanctification This place therefore and many others proving Christs satisfactorie ransome are to be opposed against Socinian blasphemies Secondlie that the redemption made by Christs blood is truely universal as sufficient and propounded not onely to one nation or a few but to all nations tongues and peoples yet not so as if all promiscuously should be saved but those of everie tribe people and language who beleeve in Christ And thus much the Elders teach us Thou hast redeemed us out of every tribe We adde in the third place XXX Argument of Christs deity that this redemption proves the Lamb to be God omnipotent For to redeem the Church from sin death and satan is a worke of divine power Psal 130.8 Hence the Apostle Act. 20.28 saith that God hath redeemed the Church by his owne blood 10 And made us to God They magnifie the Lambe for three other benefits 1. That he hath made us kings 2. priests 3. given us a kingdome on the earth The two former we have expounded Chap. 1.6 beeing meant of our spiritual kingdome and priesthood See Rom. 14.17 1 Pet. 2.5 But how shall we raigne on the earth seeing Christs kingdome is not of this world besides earthly things perish in their use and lastly the Church in this life is to expect nothing but tribulation Andreas saith that the Church shall reigne not in this present thick and cloudie world but in that new one which is promised unto the meek Matth. 5.5 But the saints may truly be said to reigne here on earth diverse wayes First by mortifying their earthly desires and trampling them under their feet Secondly as Christ raignes on the earth not by a secular but spirituall power by which he forceth the adversarie unto obedience Even so the faithfull doe raigne with Christ in the earth For the head raigning the members raigne also to be short the saintes with Christ shall judge the world and therefore shall rule the same however we are to understand this not of an earthlie but a spirituall dominion 2 Cor. 10.4 For the weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mightie through God c. But thou wilt say how shall the saints who now triumph in heaven raigne on the earth I answer after the same manner as they shall judge the world and the Angels 11. And I beheld and round about the throne The third apparition is of Angels who sing the new
The opening of the fift seale The soules under the Altar crying to have their blood avenged 9 And when he had opened the fift seale I saw under the Altar the soules of them that were slaine for the word of God and for the testimony which they held 10 And they cried with a loud voyce saying How long O Lord holy and true doest thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth 11 And white robes were given unto every one of them it was said unto them that they should rest yet for a little season untill ther fellow servants also and their brethren that should be killed as they were should be fulfilled THE COMMENTARIE ANd when he had opened the fift seale Hitherto we have heard the exposition of the preparation to the second vision viz. the majestie of God with the attendance about the throne And the Lamb taking the booke sealed with seven seales c. We have heard also the first Act of the vision viz. the opening of foure seales with the wonders following thereupon namely the white red black and pale horse prefiguring as we have shewed the future state and face of the Church unto the rising of Antichrist First white in faith then red in blood afterwards black with heresies and at last pale through hypocrisie and apostacie Now followeth the second Act of the vision in the opening of the fift seale which signifies not as some have thought new persecutions but the comforts of the Church both militant and triumphant It is not improbable that here should beginne a new Act seeing Iohn is not now bidden by any one as before he was to behold the wonder of this fift seale In it three things are recorded first what he saw at the opening of the seale the place where namelie the soules of the martyrs under the altar v. 9. secondlie what they said v. 10. and lastlie the answere which they received v. 11. The summe of al is to comfort the Church against the scandal of the crosse specially shadowed out under the red horse For least Iohn should have been to much daunted at the effusion of the martyrs blood or any of the faithfull so offended thereat as might have weakened their faith and pietie but rather in hope of a more happie state with a Christian courage might indure the furie and force of their adversaries therefore the blessed condition of the martyrs in heaven is here exhibited beeing full of many comforts to the godlie for they who in this world had been before cruellie murdered for the sake of Christ are now seen of Iohn under the protection of Christ as glorious conquerours clothed with white robes The soules under the altar The soules departed out of the bodies are invisible to the bodilie eye but Iohn saw them in the spirit By which we learn that the soule is separable subsisting in it self immortal and dies not with the bodie Of which matter Aristotle albeit an heathen yet thus writeth and thus the soule is an essential power separable pure and free from passion and againe as it is separable so also immortal and eternal Neverthelesse some have been found not onelie Epicures but even teachers in Israel as the Saduces by name who have denied it Now these brutish men Christ plainelie refuteth in the Gospel Mat. 10.28 where he bids us not to fear them which kill the body and are not able to kill the soul but him which is able to destroy both c. The soules of them that were slaine that is of the martyrs But wherefore were they slaine not for any evill committed but for the word of God and for the testimonie viz. of the Gospel that is for their faith in Christ which they openlie professed and sealed with their blood here we see that not suffering but the cause of suffering makes a martyr By the slaine are meant not as Alcasar supposeth those that were put to death by the Iewes neither they onelie who suffered under Domitian untill Diocletian as Lyra affirmeth but the soules of all the martyrs even from Nero unto Boniface the third the first Antichrist whose blood had been shed for the testimonie of Christ beeing as some call them the twelve persecutions Ribera renders it which had the testimonie passivelie that is of them it was testifyed that they were true Christians as 1 Tim. 5.10 a widow having a testimonie for good works but in the Greeke it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore to be taken activelie And are called martyrs in giving testimonie unto Christ and to the word of God So that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here in the original signifies to professe defend and holdfast Whereby is shewed the great constancie of the martyrs who were terrified with no manner of torments but still held the testimonie that is the profession of Christs name Thus in Chap. 12.17 the dragon is said to make war with them which keep the commandements of God have that is constantly maintaine the testimonie of Christ. But now where were the soules of the martyrs not under the robe of Marie Where the soules of the martyrs were as painters foolishlie represent it but under the altar which was in heaven before the throne of God as we shall see Chap. 8.3 Ribera here is to be hissed at who affirmes that Iohn in this speech hath respect to the ancient custome of Christians laying up the relicks of saints under the altars For when saith he an altar is builded there is made under it a sepulchre for to keep the relicks and the priest dipping his finger in the Chrisme makes the signe of the crosse upon the foure corners of the sepulchre saying This sepulchre is consecrated and sanctified in the name of the Father the Son and the holie Spirit peace be unto this house c. But this custome is meerelie superstitious and grosse idolatrie idlie invented manie ages after For Iohn saw not any relicks of bones or garments but the soules of martyrs not in a sepulchre or under an altar of stone but under the heavenlie altar of which the Apostle speaketh Heb. 13.10 We have an altar whereof they have no right to eat which serve the tabernacle This altar is Christ as Anselmus and Haymo doe acknowledge under which he saw as in a type the soules of the martyrs that is under the safegard and protection of Christ This beeing the first happinesse which the martyrs enjoy in the heavens is for the comfort and encouragement of them who are yet to be slain For however tyrants kill their bodies yet their soules immediatelie upon their departing are received of Christ according to the prayer of Steven the first martyr Lord Jesus receive my spirit and as Christ promised the thiefe This day thou shalt bee with me in paradise The which benefit Riberas glosse doth both deminish and wholie take away Moreover here we are plainlie
thousands of his sealed ones from beeing hurt by him of whom should consist the true Church of God This part of the chapter is opposed to the earthquake and Antichristian confusions praefigured in the third Act treated of in Chap. 6. v. 12.13.14 with which cohereth that which here followes concerning the four Angels and sealing of the elect in their fore-heads In the latter part is represented the future state of the blessed martyrs and other faithfull ones in heaven even as many as in this life have made white their robes in the blood of the Lambe This part is opposed to the horrible cryes and torments of the wicked treated of Chap. 6. v. 15.16.17 In this Chapter therefore the third fourth Act of the second vision is fully ended and the whole Chapter is consolatorie both for the Church militant in the former part and for the triumphant in the latter These things thus premised the rest following will bee the more cleare The fourth Act of vision II. The first part of the Chapter Of the restraint of the four Angels and of them that were marked with the seale of God under Antichrist 1. And after these things I saw foure Angels standing on the foure corners of the earth holding the foure windes of the earth that the winde should not blow on the earth nor on the sea nor on any tree 2. And I saw another Angel ascending from the East having the seale of the living God and he cryed with a loude voyce to the foure Angels to whom it was given to hurt the earth and the sea 3. Saying Hurt not the earth neither the sea nor the trees till we have sealed the servants of our God in their fore-heads 4. And I heard the number of them which were sealed and there were sealed an hundred and fourty and foure thousand of all the tribes of the children of Israel 5. Of the tribe of Iuda were sealed twelve thousand Of the tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand Of the tribe of Gad were sealed twelve thousand 6. Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand Of the tribe of Nephthali were sealed twelve thousand Of the tribe of M●●●sses were sealed twelve thousand 7. Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand Of the tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand Of the tribe of Issachar were sealed twelve thousand 8. Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand Of the tribe of Ioseph were sealed twelve thousand Of the tribe of Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand THE COMMENTARIE ANd after these things Now John rehearseth what he further saw in the sixt seale beeing contrarie to the former as containing joyfull matter He saw before what Antichrist and his ministers had don and what at length they suffered for the same Here he sees what in the mean time was don by the godly on earth what was laid up for them in heaven Now herein interpreters doe verie much differ and for the most part doe rather darken then explain the matter in not observing the method and scope thereof Lyra goes on in applying these things unto the histories of the Romane Emperours Lyras opinion of the four Angels The four Angels standing on the four corners of the earth holding the four winds of the earth he interprets of four Emperours great persecutors of the Christians who after Diocletian and Maximianus had laid downe the Empire afflicted the Church in many parts of the world at one time Maximianus in the East Severus in Italie Maxentius at Rome Licinius of Alexandria in Aegypt these held the windes that is hindered the teachers of the Church that they should not blow that is preach Gods word for as by the blowing of the windes the earth is made fruitfull so the preaching of the Gospell fructifyeth the garden of the Church militant By the earth sea and tree● he understands Christians some dwelling in firme lands some in Ilands others in woods for to avoyd persecution The Angel having the seal of God forbidding to hurt the earth and sea is Constantine the great bearing the signe of the crosse in his ensigne and restraining those four tyrants from hurting of Christians For Constantine at length overcame Maxentius Licinius and other their fellow tyrants and having obtained the empire alone he signed many thousand in the forehead that is beeing converted unto the faith of Christ he bestowed many great priviledges upon the Church signed many thousands that is caused them to be baptised with the signe of the crosse on their foreheads This interpretation I thus far approve of What is approvable in Lyras interpretation namely that the windes signifie preachers and the blowing of the windes Gods word preached and the holding of the windes the hindring of Gospell in the course thereof But for his application of the rest unto the short space of those four tyrants it agrees little to the scope seeing those things were to happen a long while after under Antichrist as appeareth by the circumstances and as the comparing of these things with the following visions will more clearly manifest Besides hee erreth in making Constantine this sealing Angel forasmuch as undoubtedlie the outward signe of the crosse is not here at all intended but a higher mysterie concerning the preservation of the elect and their separation from the abominations of Antichrist least they should be defiled thereby as will more plainly appear by the matter following Rupertus refers this unto the four kingdoms of the world hindring the faith of Christ viz. the Babylonian Persian Greek Romane Empires but this is too general Andreas herein agreeing with most of our interpreters doth more rightlie applie it to the times of Antichrist to which Ribera also consenteth but yet in this he erreth viz. in that he thinks that the following contents of this booke are to be applyed to the four yeares reigne of his supposed Antichrist For generally the following visions doe plainlie represent the foregoing four Acts of the history of the Church from Iohns time even unto the end under other figures he also differeth from al others in taking these to be good Angels which are here spoken of wheras all others agree that they are evill Angels Notwithstanding in this they doe generallie erre thorow an erroneous supposition in restraining the time of Antichrist unto the last four yeeres of the world considering that Antichrist hath allreadie reigned above a thousand yeares even from Boniface the third who as we have already shewed was the first that professed himself universall priest leaving unto his successors this most wicked title and mark of Antichrist But to let passe these mens opinions we here take notice of a second part of the third Act of vision II. wherein Iohn is informed of the state of the godlie during the earthquakes and Antichristian commotions For having seen before things horrible and prodigious even a violent alteration of all states of the Christian world under
Lord shall descend from heaven and come to judgement 1 Thess 4.16 and when he soundeth the inhabitants of heaven shall sing a song of triumph and the dead shall be called forth to judgement Chap. 11.15.18 3 And another Angel came This is the second part of the preparation unto the vision An Angel casteth the golden censer with the fire of the altar upon the earth All interpreters say something touching this Angel who he was what he effected But wherefore he prevented the sounding of the others and how this sight doth cohere with that which followes I finde it not sufficiently expounded by any of them the which thing notwithstanding is necessarily to be considered First I will rehearse the opinion of others Andreas acknowledgeth Andreas opinion touching the Angel with the censer howbeit very darkely that it is Christ the high-Priest of the Church who also is the Altar thereof He offers the prayers of the saintes to God desiring saith he that the scourge here inflicted upon the wicked may lessen their eternal torments c. by lightnings voyces thunders and earthquakes he understands the terrours and threanings which shal goe before the consummation of the world Lyra doting as his usuall manner is applies this to Pope Damasus The doting opinion of Lyra. the successor of Liberius about the yeere 384. who as he saith had the golden censer that is puritie of hart zeale towards God He offered the prayers of the Saintes to God that is he composed the mattins and evening songs and glorie be to the Father and to the Son c causing them to be sung by all the Churches He sent forth the censer fire on the earth by stirring up the inhabitāts therof to fervent charity After which followed thunders of preaching voyces of praysing of God lightnings of miracles earthquackes of conversion of mens hearts to God But these things are to foolish Rupertus understands this Angel to be him that was present with the Fathers Rupertus opinion by whose ministery the law was given and the priest-hood instituted But what use was there here that a cleare and known historie should be represented unto Iohn by oscure types wherefore they erre from the scope who in expounding the Revelation keep not themselves within the limits of the New Testament seeing it is certaine that onely the condition of the Church under the Gospel is revealed unto Iohn Ribera denies this Angel to be Christ Ribera denies this Angel to be Christ both because Christ is no where absolutely called an Angel as also because it is said And another Angel which shewes that he was one like to the other seven as Chap. 1. I saw four Angels and a little after I saw another Angel ascending Now he supposeth that it was Gabriel who appeared to Daniel Marie or Michael Dan. 9.21 Luk. 1.26 to whom the whole Church is committed The Altar he makes to be Christ The Censer by a strained metaphor he applies to the bodie of Christ full of holes like a censer by the woundes he received at his passion Therefore he imagineth that the Angel offers up the prayers of the Saintes The thunders wyces earthquakes c. he takes literally for the signes prognosticating the future calamities of the ungodly Alcasar understands it of an imaginarie person Alcasars opinion shadowing out Christian charitie My Anonymus saith wel This other Angel is Christ Anonymus doth rightly applie it to Christ who is present with his elect to defend them from the deceit of hereticks unto the end of the world he offereth the prayers of the Saintes upon the golden Altar that is upon himself who is both God and man and also interceeds for his Church before the Father he sends forth the censer and fire upon the earth that is by sending the holie Ghost upon his Apostles And there were thundrings c. that is the threatning of Gods ministers against Antichrist And earthquakes that is through the preachers of the Gospell Christianity was devided against it self some favouring Antichrists super stirions some impugning the same This interpretation both I my self and most of our writers approve of as most true For this Angel standeth and performeth in heaven the work of the Churches high priest in offering up the prayers of the Saintes and making them acceptable to God as a sweet smelling sacrifice Now the Church hath no other high-priest but Christ alone therefore Ribera in applying this not to Christ but unto a created Angel robs him of the honour of his priesthood and makes the Saints in heaven as mediatours to be praied unto But this wicked invention is contrarie both to this vision and the whole drift and scope of the Revelation His objection that Christ is no where in scripture absolutely called an Angel is false for he who delivered the Patriarch Jacob out of all his troubles is absolutely called an Angel Gen. 48.16 which must be understood of Christ Iehovah the Sonne of God as appears by Gen. 32.9.11 28.15 in Mala. 3.1 Christ is called the Angel of the covenant Neyther is it true that John makes him like one of the seven Angels here spoken of For he calls him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 another Angel the which must be understood not onely of another individual but of another kinde of Angel as plainly appears by the office of priesthood attributed to this Angel to be short we have already shewed that what is alleadged in Chap. 7. v. 1.2 is to be referred unto Christ our Lord. Thus we have the meaning of the preparation Before the seven Angels should stirr up the world by sounding their trumpets Christ steps in as the high-priest for to offer up to God the prayers and groanes of the Church militant against tyrants Antichrist to teach us that the complaints of the faithfull vanish not away in the ayre but are received by Christ our mercifull highpriest by him effectually offered presented before God thereby to procure deliverance for them This is the lively comfort of the Church that she hath an highpriest to fly unto in all her troubles But as yet it doth not sufficiently appear how these things agree with what followeth therefore we will more narrowlie consider the matter That which the seven Angels shall afterward more distinctly set forth by sounding their trumpets The mystery of the Angel with the golden censer explained This Angel as I before said as a certaine forerunner in a general way shadowes out the same For as Iohn in the beginning of the foregoing vision saw Christ riding and crowned as king of the Church and conquerour of al enemies first on a white horse afterward on a red thirdlie on a black at last on a pale so now he sees Christ standing at the altar as the highpriest of the Church offering to God the prayers of the Saintes and sending into the earth the fire of the
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
and 5. It containes a thanksgiving a prayer They give thankes to the Lord God almighty which is which was and which is to come that is either to Christ or unto the holy Trinity as before on Chap. 1.8 But for what benefit Because thou hast taken to thee thy great power and hast reigned But what good comes hereby unto the Elders indeed they have great cause to rejoyce for these benefits considering that they serve to the eternal felicity of the Church triumphant Hitherto the Lord in suffering the fury of the adversaries did seem not to exercise his great power that is his omnipotencie and Christ to be overcome by Antichrist but at length by taking that is by exercising and shewing forth his power in casting down the adversaries he delivered the afflicted Church out of all her trouble and by reigning blesseth her with eternal happinesse Rom. 14.17 The kingdome of God is righteousnes peace and joy in the holy Ghost And God shall then perfectly reigne when as he shall give to his elect eternal righteousnesse peace and the joy of the spirit Of this see the description in the end of the second Vision Chap. 7. v. 15.16.17 18. And the nations were angry Now followes their wish or prayer For by putting God and Christ as it were in minde of the time of judgment they humbly beseech him that he would most justly execute the same according to the prophesies of the scripture The nations were angry This is as it were a former reason Because the nations are angrie as if he should say they have bin angry that is raged long enough against Christ and the Church It is time therefore that thou also be angrie that is represse the angrie nations Thus he calleth all adversaries whatsoever whither Jewes Turkes or Christians falsly so named Thy wrath That is thy vengeance and judgement or wrath for punishments by a metalepsis as Rom. 2.5 Is come For let it come And the time namely is come the which thou hast defined in ty eternal counsel Vnknown indeed unto mortal men but then revealed by Christ unto them in heaven For without a speciall revelation no man knoweth that day save God alone But what time Of the dead That is to be raised Some take it of the wicked onely dead in sins But the following distribution of them which are to be judged comprehends all both good and bad For it is added That they should be judged But the godlie shall not come into judgement Jo. 5.24 He that beleeveth on him that sent mee hath eternal life and shall not come into judgement But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 judgement is there put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 condemnation and therfore Beza hath so rendred it So then the elect shall come to judgment for all must stand before the tribunall seat of Christ however they shall come to be absolved and not condemned And therefore the Elders further adde Two companies of them that are to be judged That thou shouldest give reward They make two sorts of people of such as shal be judged some to be rewarded the other to be destroyed as Christ in Matth. 25. Joh. 5. The reward of their faith shal be given them and of their obedience constancie patience labours and miseries What reward eternal life glorie Vnto whom They make three sorts of such as shal be rewarded Three rankes of such as are to be rewarded First they place Gods servants the prophets thereby comprehending the faithfull of more special note whither under the Law or Gospel as Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Evangelists c. who were Gods servants by a more then orninary vocation Secondly the Saintes to wit confessours and martyrs who eyther by sincere preaching or constant martyrdome have held forth the glory of Christ against Antichrist Vnder whom are comprehended all faithfull teachers and preachers of the word called Saints by an Hebraisme as separated to some special work In the third place they add the fearers of Gods name that is all other faithful ones besides the two former companies who from the beginning of the world unto the end therof have worshipped the Lord in sinceritie What it is to feare the name of God For to fear the name of God is to worship him sincerely to call upon him and love him above all because the feare of the Lord is the beginning of wisdome godlinesse Great and small They shew that the reward is common unto all without any difference of merit either of greater or lesser condition and state to the end that neyther the great ones should promise unto themselves a greater reward or the others despaire of the same recompence Popish Sophisters dispute much touching the degrees of glorie which rather proceedeth out of their own braine from a false supposed foundation of humane merits then from the Scriptures of God But whither the Lord wil crown his servants with equal or unequal glorie it shal not be according to their merit but merely of his own grace And this is all Jovinian against whom Jerom wrote pleaded for except I be deceived viz. that unto all who kept their baptisme there should be one recompence in the kingdome of God For he seems not to disapprove of a degree of reward but of merit The crown of righteousnes propounded unto all the faithfull Paul the Apostle who was taken up into the third heaven and inferiour to none of the Saintes shewes us that for him was laid up a crown of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous judge would give him at that day and not unto him onely but unto all that love his appearing This same crown of righteousnesse the Elders doe promise unto the Prophets and Saintes and all the fearers of the name of God This sufficeth for our faith and consolation Let us leave disputing in this life touching the differences of the crowne and rather indeavour so to walke as that we may be made partakers therof in the life to come That thou shouldest give reward Here fals in a question For a reward is given of merit and debt Therfore say some the reward of eternall life is given unto the Saintes as a due debt otherwise it would not be called a reward Now it is not onely here so called Mat. 5.12 20.8 1 Cor. 3.8 Rom. 4.4 but in many other places Great is your reward in heaven Give unto them their reward or hire Every one shall receive his own reward according to his own labour But to him that worketh the reward is not given of grace but of debt Thus the mercenarie adversaries of grace dispute But how eternal life is said to be a reward appeares by the words of the Apostle The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is life eternal Rom. 6.23 Ephes 2.9 It is the gift of God not of workes least any man should glorie Now all gifts are gratis and not due debts Forasmuch
therfore as eternal life is a gift Eternal life is mercy not merit it is of mercy and not of merit And it is called a reward not due but freely given such a reward as a father gives to his son not as a master unto his hired servant Neither is it contradictorie that the Apostle denies that a reward is given of grace For he denies it of a reward of workes To him that worketh saith he the reward is not imputed of grace but of workes Now we denie that life eternal is said to bee such a reward For not to workers but to beleevers is this reward given They insist out of Thomas Thom. 1. secundae quaest 114. ad 1. that it is not indeed given of debt in order of justice but yet that it is given of debt by divine ordination in as much as every promise becomes a debt I answer That the divine appointment is not that we should by our merits obtaine eternal life or that eternall life should be given to any of merit but Gods appointment according unto the Gospell is this that eternall life bee given not to them that worke but to them that beleeve not of debt but of grace for the gift of God is life eternall Faith works indeed because it is operative through Charitie but it doth not therefore worke that it may merit but to the end that due obedience may be performed to the Lord. For no debt can be said to be a merit But thou wilt say Howfar a promise becomes a debt every promise becomes a debt This is true amongst men with whom there is a natural and legal obligation But that Gods promise should come under the nature of a debt it is false Both because their is no proportion between God who is infinite and a finite creature neyther any obligation on Gods part as also because as wel the promise as the thing promised is of mere grace For it is of grace I say that he promiseth to give whatsoever he doth give he gives it of grace But they say God by promise becomes indebted unto us This Aquinas himself denies saying It followes not that God simply becomes a debtor to us but unto himself Se Bellarm. castigat lib 5. in prooem cap. 3.14.16 de justif And destroy them that destroy the earth The other sort to be judged are such as shal be destroyed with unquencheable fire and eternall torments For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to corrupt is not so to destroy them as if they should cease to be like as it is in naturall corruption the which is motus ab esse ad non esse a dissolution from a beeing to nothing but to thrust them into punishment so as they shal not be blessed but miserable for ever Who destroy the earth A paraphrase of such as are to be destroyed among the number of whom chiessy are tyrants hereticks and both Antichrists The sonne of perdition destroyes the earth who in a speciall manner destroyed the earth that is the inhabitants of the earth by fire sword by destructive lawes and doctrines by wicked manners and examples This is a most proper note of Antichrist who therefore is called the sonn of perdition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because being lost himselfe and devoted to destruction he destroyes the earth like a robber killing soules and drawing men by all deceiveablenes of unrighteousnes and lying signes with himself into eternal destruction So Chap. 19.2 The whore is said to corrupt the earth with her fornication And therefore as Antichrist is a destroyer so he shal be rewarded with a final destruction Hitherto is the description of the last judgement the which by no shew of reason can be applyed to any other thing neyther is it here put by way of anticipation but repeated in a right order as beeing the last Act of the third Vision the which order they who observe not in this book doe vainly weary themselves with many subtilties 19. And the temple of God was opened in heaven Here some begin the following Vision But these things cohere with that which went before For John shewes allegorically the execution of the last judgement viz. the reward of the Saintes and punishment of the wicked The temple of God in heaven That is the Church triumphant in which God dwelleth as in a temple It shall then be opened when the heavenly glorie thereof shal fullie appeare For now indeed it is inward and hid and therefore the magnificence of the temple beeing as it were shut is not perspicuous But then the temple of God shal be opened when the Church shall appear most glorious And the Ark of the testament was seen He persists in the allegory of the ancient temple In the inmost part whereof was kept the Ark of the covenant a type of Christ beeing not to be seen of any save once a yeere by the High priest signifying that Christ of old was hid and as through a lattice the people then had but a smal glimpse of him Vnder the New Testament he appeared in the flesh but in a lowly way neither is his glory yet seen in the Gospel but by faith But after the judgment the Ark of the covenant shall be seen in heaven that is Christ shall so appeare as he is in heavenly glory unto his elect Now we see through a glasse darkly but then we shall see him face to face The sight of God is the Saintes felicity This Vision shal be the Saintes happines viz. when Christ shall present himself to be perfectlie beheld enjoyed and fullie perfect the grace of his covenant And there were lightnings Before Chap. 4.5 in the praeparation of the second Vision there proceeded out of the throne lightnings thundrings voyces and Chap. 8.5 in the praeparation of the third Vision the Censer beeing cast into the earth there were voyces and thunders and lightnings and an earthquake The wickeds pitnishment but in sense far different then it is in the catastrophe or change of this Vision For now John in the description of the last judgement as he shewed the felicity of the Saintes allegorically so he represents the punishments of the wicked metaphorically by the lightnings thunders voyces earthquakes and great haile oppressing them These things shal be the terrible signes of the wrath to come when the heaven earth all the elements shall conspire together to take vengeance on the wicked according to that in the Psalmist Psal 11.6 he will raine upon the wicked snares fire and brimstone wind of burning storms shall be the portion of their cup. Our Tossanus to the same purpose understands here the shaking of the whole frame of this world melting of the elements of which Peter speaketh together with the destruction of the wicked The like is spoken Chap. 16.18 at the powring forth of the seventh Viall in Vision the fift Thus much touching the third Vision
and seven trumpets The fourth Vision followeth touching the Woman the Beasts The fourth Vision Touching the Woman in travaile and flying into the wildernes from the dragon and of the two Beasts c. THE PRAEFACE THey who thinke that in the prophesie of the Revelation a continued historie of the Church is linked together even from Christs first comming unto the second begin the same from this Chapter in which it seems the new birth of the Church is represented But at the verie first they run into a great inconvenience For they are forced to bring in such an hyperbaton and confused order of the history as cannot be defended For that which was first ought not to have been omitted til now but to have been described in the first place Wherefore their opinion is farr better who observe that in this booke the condition of the Church on earth is sundry times shewed unto Iohn in certaine distinct Visions as in the beginning we noted Neither is the iteration to be thought needlesse for however in the nature and kinde of the events most of the visions are alike yet in the species and indiviaduals they represent unto us histories much different in somuch that what is in the former was more darke obscure is in the later clearer fuller set down And hence by diligent comparing of the Visions each with other aman shall have a singular helpe to remove that obscurity which appeares in this prophesie After the three Visions therefore formerly expounded The first wherof specially concernes Christs walking in the midst of the candelsticks and his admonishing the teachers of the Churches in Asia touching their duty The other two generally respect the booke sealed with seven seales The summe of the fourth Vision and opened by the Lambe with the seven trumpets of the Angels Now the fourth is exhibited to Iohn touching the woman in travaile the dragon standing to devour her childe and persecuting her and of the two Beasts warring against the Saintes as also of the Lambe overcomming them and of the Angels preaching at the last harvest and vintage Chap. 12.13.14 In which types the future condition of the Church in this world is much more evidently shadowed out then before even from the first beginning thereof under Christ and the ministerie of the Apostles untill the end For the Church shall have to doe with the Dragon the Beasts be miserablie afflicted and tryed by them yet she sufficiently armed from heaven for so grievous combats at last shall gloriously triumph over all her adversaries This Vision is also universal manifestly consisting of four Acts The four Acts thereof like the two former general visions The first Act containes the proposition of the Churches calamities at her birth and growth under the Iewish and Romane tyrants persecuting the woman as also under hereticks labouring through the instinct of the Dragon to devoure her with the floodes of errours and heresies Chap. 12. It answereth to the four former seales of the second Vision and to the first four trumpets of the third Vision representing the historie of the Church for the space of 606 yeeres viz. from the birth of Christ untill the rising of Antichrist The second Act is opposed to the former containes comfort for the Church against the wrath of the Dragon and floodes of heresies sent forth against her because the childe of the Woman is caught up into heaven and Michael the Archangel fighteth for her against the Dragon The woman with Eagles wings is caried into the wildernes hiding herself from the sight of men The earth swalloweth up the Dragons vomit This Act is mingled with the former in the same Chapter it answereth to the fift seale of the second Vision and to the tenth chapter treating of the mighty Angel standing upon the earth and sea Vision the third The third Act hath two parts The first part is of the Antichristian persecution representing the amplification of the Churches calamities or the new and more grievous conflicts which shee sustained during her abode in the wildernes against Antichrist whose kingdome power crueltie and subtiltie is set forth under the image of Beasts Chap. 13. This part answereth to the sixt seale of Vision the second and to the fift trumpet of Vision the third The latter part is opposed to the former in way of a parallel beeing consolatory to the godly prefiguring Christs presence in his deserted Church and his preserving of the same against the Beasts as also the reformation that should be in the latter times through the Angels that is new teachers of truth and godlinesse who by their preaching should oppose the Babylonish Antichrist and bring men back againe into the right way of salvation chap. 14. unto ver 14. This part answereth to the former part of chap. 7. touching the 144000 that were sealed by the Angel in Vision second and to the former part of chapt 11. of the meting of the temple and prophesie of the two witnesses in Vision third And this whole Act appertaines unto the historie of the Church which now from Antichrists rising hath continued 1035 yeeres and shal perhaps remaine unto the end of the 1260 dayes or yet for the space of 225 yeeres but this is onely known unto the Lord. To be short the fourth Act from v. 14. unto the end of chap. 14. under the type of an Angel gathering in the harvest and vintage of the earth represents the last judgement in which the Church at length beeing freed from all trouble shal be blest with eternal glorie But Antichrist with all his followers cast into the lake of Gods eternal wrath This part answereth to the latter member of Chapter the seventh touching the melody of the Church triumphant in Vision second as also to the latter part of Chapter 11 concerning the joyfull song of the Elders in Vision third Thus we have the whole distribution of this Vision The Argument Parts and Analysis of CHAPTER XII THis Chapter in which as we have said is shadowed out the first and second Act of Vision fourth under the type of a woman in travel and a Dragon opposing of her and of Michael fighting for the woman against the Dragon doth represent the state of the Church even from her infancy with the changes of her after age for at the very first she was cruelly set upon by Satan yet powerfully defended from heaven by Christ so as neither the devils cruelty nor tyrants rage nor the deceits of wicked hereticks could overcome her although she were forced to flee into the wildernes and to withdraw herself from the sight of men The parts of the Chapter are two I. Two great signes are shewed unto Iohn in heaven of a woman in travel and a Dragon standing before her to devoure her child v. 1.2.3.4 II. The history and event of both these signes unto the end In the former part is described the first signe 1. From the
adjunct of the magnitude It was a great signe 2. From the place It was in heaven 3. From the form It was a woman who is described by three external adjuncts She was clothed with the Sun she had the Moon under her feet and a crown of stars on her head ver 1. Three internall also she was with childe travailed in birth and for paine cryed to be delivered vers 2. The latter signe is described 1. from the place it was seen in heaven 2. From the form it was a Dragon 3. From the quantitie it was great 4. From the colour red 5. From the monstrous shape having seven heads ten horns seven crownes v. 3. 6. From a double cruelty with his taile he cast the third part of the stars from heaven to the earth stood to devour the Womans childe v. 4. In the second part is set forth 1 the womans fruite or child by a threefold description 1. His sexe a man child 2. His office a ruler of the nations 3. The event he was caught up to the throne of God ver 5. The Womans flight sustentation and abode in the desert the which is inserted by an anticipation ver 6. For the woman did not flie presently but after the Dragon was cast out of heaven and she received wings v. 14. The war that was the place wherof is noted to be in heaven the Combatants Michael the Dragon with their Angels on both sides v. 7. And the catastrophe or successe of the battel Michaels victory the Dragons overthrow with a threefold description of the said Dragon he is that old serpent the calumniator seducer of the whole world v. 8.9 And the effect a song of prayses of some in heaven not named in which they celebrate three benefits of this victorie viz. that the kingdom of God and Christ is vindicated that the Church militant is freed from the accusation of the conquered Dragon v. 10. and that the Church also herselfe was a conquerour of the Dragon shewing three causes therof one principal meritious viz. the blood of the Lamb two ministeriall the word of their testimonie and constancy in the faith v. 11. 2. They gratulate the heavens them that dwell in them for this victory v. 12. They denounce woe to the inhabiters of the earth and sea for three causes one efficient because the devil was come down unto them two moving causes because he was full of wrath having but a little time Ibid. A new attempt of the Dragon against the woman by persecution v. 13. The Womans flight And 1. her help to it two wings of an Eagle were given her 2. The forme she flue out of the sight of the Dragon 3. The place into the wildernes 4. The end there to be nourished 5. The time for a time times and half a time v. 14. Another attempt of the serpent against the woman He vomiteth out waters to drown her v. 15. The womans preservation not beeing hurt therby through the earth swallowing up the waters ver 16. The Dragons wrath and war against the rest of the womans seed the which seed is noted by two epithites by their obedience to the Law faith in the Gospel v. 17. And thus the history is ended by noting the place in which Iohn then stood v. 18. The first part of the Chapter Two signes in heaven of the woman in travell the Dragon watching to devour her child 1. And there appeared a great wonder in heaven a woman clothed with the Sun and the Moone under her feet and upon her head a crowne of twelve starres 2. And she being with child cryed travailing in birth pained to be delivered 3. And there appeared another wonder in heaven and behold a great red dragon having seven heads ten hornes and seven crownes upon his head 4. And his tayle drew the third part of the starres of heaven and did cast them to the earth and the dragon stood before the woman which was ready to be delivered for to devoure her childe assoone as it was borne THE COMMENTARIE ANd there was seen This Vision goes up higher with the condition of the new Church then hitherto hath bin don in the other viz. from the very birth of Christ at which time the Church of the Gospel began to be born For it is apparent that here is represented the first birth infancy youthful condition of the new Church both how it was born educated accepted in the world Therfore howsoever in this prophesie are represented unto Iohn not things that were already past but to come neverthelesse the nienty six yeeres which were from the birth of Christ until the time of this revelation that is from the 42 yeer of Augustus unto the 14 yeer of Domitian are also included in this vision and hence we see that it is more full and perfect then the others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was seen to mee or by mee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a signe or wonder An image represented either to the eyes or understanding It is more probable it was a mental vision because of the circumstances which could not well al of them have been corporally acted Great In signification that is shadowing out great and wonderfull things For what can be more wonderful then that a cruel dragon should stand ready to devoure the child of a weak woman in travaile and yet not prevaile In heaven Here I seek no mysterie because these mental apparitions were exhibited to Iohn in heaven A woman clothed with the sun Ribera here moves two great and difficult questions Riberas two questions weighed as he cals them One what woman this was whither the Church or the alwayes blessed virgin Marie because some things agree to Marie as that it is a woman clothed with the sun that she brought forth a man child ruling the nations with a rod of iron c. Some things agree not that she cryed for pain in travaile that she fled into the desert c. Again it seems not to agree to the Church to bring forth a man child ruling the nations with a rod of iron because the Church did not beget Christ but is begotten of him through his word that also the dragon is said leaving the woman to fight with her seed c. At length he concludes out of Methodius with Cesariensis that not the virgin Marie but the Church is the woman here spoken of The other question as he saith is more difficult Whither this be spoken concerning the Church in her first state that is before Christ comming or at his first comming or of that state which she shal be in in the last age of the world Now rejecting the former opinion he supposeth that all is to be referred unto the last time of the Church and the four yeeres reigne of his Antichrist and his reason is because the womans flight and her abode in the wildernes 1260 dayes as also the fight of Michael
seeing Christ alone hath troaden the Wine-presse of Gods wrath and overcom the Dragon This is to be referred to the decencie of the Vision For a captain doth not use to fight without an armie And all though Christ alone hath fought the battell hand to hand as it were with Satan yet hath he also left occasion of combatting unto his Angels that so they might not stand still and onely behold their captaine fighting but couragiouslie imitate him in the same The Angels of Michael were the Apostles who next unto the captaine suffered the adversaries rage Togither with all other faithfull and elect ones standing continuallie in battel aray under Christ their leader So also the Dragon hath his Angels joyned with him the which are his heades and hornes viz. all instruments of the devill whither high or low by whom he exerciseth his violence against Christ and the Church This is the spirituall combat betwixt Christ and Satan 8. And prevailed not The event of the war is that the Dragon with his followers stood not in battell but fleeing were cast downe to the earth Great indeed and cruel is the Dragon but Michael is greater and more powerfull Satan is that strong armed man Math. 12.29 Luk. XI 21. Heb. 2.14 possessing his house in peace and vexing the Church but Christ stronger then hee beeing come takes away his palace overcomes him and divides his spoiles For by death he destroyed him that had the power of death that is the devill and delivered them who through the feare of death were all their life time subject to bondage Now as Christ sits triumphing at the right hand of God so there was no place found for Satan in heaven but hee was cast to the earth like a champion broken and overcome whom then we clearely judge to be conquered when we see him lie groveling on the ground This thrusting down of Satan out of heaven was mysticall not historical of which also Christ speakes in the Gospel I beheld satan as lightning fall from heaven And again Now is the judgement of this world now shall the prince of this world be cast out Ioh. 12.31 For the spreading of the Gospell through the world was Satans overthrow the destruction of his kingdom So Christ beeing neere his death saith The Prince of this world is Judged That is beeing shortlie to be Judged he saith he is Iudged like as a dying man is said to be dead or the like For in his death he threw down Satan by merit In his resurrection and ascention by efficacie viz sending down the holy Ghost from heaven throw whose grace Satan is thrust forth out of the harts of the faithfull Andreas also gives a touch of the mysticall sense of this war and victorie of Michael applying the casting down of the Dragon here Andreas opinion Vnto the second fall of Satan by which he was overcome and thrown down through the crosse of Christ Namelie when the Prince of this world was judged and thrust from that tyrannie which he before exercised 9. That old Serpent Now that we might not imagine this to be a naturall Dragon he sets him forth by his proper names or surnames whence we may know both his naturall disposition and who he is He calls him that old Serpent as afterward in Chap. 20 vers 2.10 To wit 1. The old serpent who of old by infusing into our first parents the venome of pride was the cause of their and our fall and ruin This Dragon therfore is the same who in Gen. 3. Is that subtil serpent and may be called that old deceiver De exhort mart in proem He is therfore that proper adversary the Devill saith Cyprian and the old enemie with whom we wage war who almost for the space of six thousand yeeres hath fought against mankind And therefore through length of time hath fullie learned all kindes of temptations and how to lie in wait for to destroy the soule If he find a soldiour of Christ unprepared unskilful carelesse and not vigilant with his whole hart he circumvents him before he knowes it he beguiles him unawares and deceiveth him as beeing not skilfull But if any one keeping the commandements of the Lord and stronglie cleaving to Christ resist him he must needs be overcome because Christ whom we confesse is invincible He cals him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Devill that is a slanderour or false accuser 2. The Devill For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a calumnie is whē a thing wel spokē is wrested unto a malicious sense and this is the proper worke of the Devill beeing the first most impious calumniatour There seem to be two causes why hee is so called First he slaunderously perverted Gods prohibition to our first parents concerning the forbidden fruit by accusing God of falsehood and envie as though man should not die by eating of the forbidden fruit but become like unto God Secondly because he ceaseth not to cry out against Christ who died was raised up for our sakes denying his satisfaction scoffing at our redemption and not ceasing to accuse the saintes before the judgment of God as guiltie of death for their sinnes He cals him also Satan that is adversarie 3. Satan for the Hebrue Satan signifies to resist Because from the beginning he was a rebell to God and Christ and yet ceaseth not to oppugne the childeren of God who are Christs members Lastlie he calleth him the seducer of the whole earth 4. Seducer or a most vile impostor through long and continued wickednesse For at the beginning with his lies he seduced our Mother Eve through his impostures he caused the old world to be drowned by the flood and soon after again he drew aside the sonnes of men from the true worship of God unro idolatrie and alwayes hath bin the first inventer and deviser of heresies and deceits by most wicked instruments Brightman as I said expounds it historicallie making Michael with his Angels to be Constantine with his legions The Dragon with his Angels Maxentius Maximinus and Licinius by whose tyrannie Satan did vomit out his last hatred against Christians against whom Constantine warred Maxentius flieing over a certaine bridge was drowned in tyber Maximinus perished in miserable exile And Licinius at last was also put to death So the Dragon was then cast down from heaven to the earth these tyrants beeing driven out of the borders of the Church Now whither this be the meaning of the type I dare not affirme seeing the proper and expresse description of the Dragon seems verie much to condradict the same as here so also afterward Chap. 20.2 Where the same apprehending of Satan is figured out in another type and to another end 10. And I heard a great voyce The warre and victorie of Michael and the overthrow of the Dragon have bin spoken of Now followeth the Song of the Church triumphant in which two fruites of the victorie are
manner the destruction of Rome is aggravared Now these things because of the similitude are here applied out of the Ancient Prophets See Isa 24.8 and Jerem. 7.34 and Ezech. 26.13 In the former the desolation of Iudea in the latter that of Tyrus is set foorth under the like Figures Because thy Merchants are the great men of the Earth He concludes with repeating the causes of this horrible judgement that the Romanists might not complaine of overmuch rigour In the Analysis we shewed the causes to be three 1. Riot 2. Witchcraft 3. Slaughter of the Saints Their riot is noted in one most evident signe onely because her Merchants are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The great men of the Earth as if he should say not minding their condition and originall they cary themselves as Princes usurping authoritie over all men Who now will say that these are ordinarie Traders what if one or two Merchants come to be Princes what is that to all these As therefore their wares were allegoricall So these are Allegoricall-Merchants Spirituall-Prelates Ecclesiasticall-Princes Cardinals Palriarchs Archbishops Bishops c. as before we shew'd At first the seven Deacons of Rome were Cardinals severallie placed through the Citie to preach and administer holy things But now there are sixtie eight purpled Fathers being as they say the chiefe Senate of the whole world who according to their instruction may not stand up though a Prince or a King salute them or give them the way and chiefe seat at Banquets What therfore can be more arrogant then the pride of these Merchants For by thy sorceries This cause hath bin often declared He cals the Idolatrie false doctrines ungodlie and superstitious traditions by which Antichrist hath seduced the Christian world Witchcraft both in regard of like efficacie because as with Charming-cups they infatuate worldly men and draw the souse to destruction because also Magicke is alwayes joyned with Idolatrie as we find in speciall among the Idolatrous Papists 24. And in her was found the blood of the Prophets The crueltie of both old and new Rome against the Godlie is here noted but chiefly of the new who under pretence of the Catholicke Religion hath for these thousand yeers shed as much Christian blood if not more then the old Pyrants in the first three hundred yeeres Is found in thee Because the greater part of Martyrs are slain at Rome And of all that were slaine upon the Earth Because also the Martyrs that suffered in other Kingdomes and Provinces were slaine by the authoritie of the Romish Strumpet And therefore all that blood shall be justly avenged on her The same was before said Chap. 16. ver 6. For they have shed the blood of Saints and thou hast given them blood to drinke Of which see more on the place The Coherence Argument Parts and Analysis of CHAPTER XIX THe third and last part of the Sixt Vision touching the Iudgement of the great Whore and the Beast that is of Rome and Antichrist remaineth to be treated of The destruction and burning of the City to bee executed by the Ten Kings once the Vassals of the Romane Antichrist but afterward converted to Christ the Angell had revealed to John in Cap. XVII and described the same by a Propheticall Hypotyposis in Chapter XVIII But seeing the whole Papacy shall not utterly perish at the sacking and burning of Rome Antichrists Seat in Italy but that the Pope shall find entertainment either in Spaine or otherwhere and shall persevere to oppose Christ and persecute the Gospell unto the end therefore in this XIX Chapter is revealed the destruction also of the Pope himselfe and of the whole Papacy The Chapter is full of manifold doctrines and consists of a most artificious structure Therefore the Reader may conceive the Argument Parts and I ogicall resolution to bee thus The company of Saints rejoyce over the judgement of Babylon their deliverance from his Tyranny and the Wedding of the Lambe at hand By and by is described a type of Christs comming to judgement and casting of the Beast and all his followers into the Lake of fire The parts therefore seem to be two The Saints rejoycing and Antichrists judgement Iohns errour about worshipping the Angell being brought in by a Parenthesis But we may more fitly cast the same into three Heads or Branches 1. WHat Iohn heard in the first nine Verses Aften these things I heard II. What he did ver 10. And I fell downe c. III. What at length he saw from verse 11. And I saw unto the end Touching the first Hee heard a two-fold voyce of gladne● and praysings The first celebrate the righteous judgements of God in the five first Verses The other triumph because of the wedding of the Lambe in the four following Verses In the former rejoycing is noted 1. Who they were A twofold Chore or Company first a great multitude leading or beginning the Triumph-Song in three Verses The second viz. the twenty foure Elders and foure Beasts Isinging after them verse 4. ●●1 Where they were In Heaven verse 1. Both Companies therefore denote the Church Triumphant The Hyinne of the first Chore consisteth of three Parts 1. A Proposition God is to be praised Halelujah saivation c. ver 1.2 The Confirmation from the justnesse First in the Thesis because Gods judgements are true and righteous Secondly in a double Hypothesis or application because in righteousnesse he hath judged the whore and avenged their blood ver 2.3 The conclusion iterating the praises of God ver 3. Touching the other Company is noted 1. Their gesture And they fell downe 2. Their Religion and worshipped 3. Their assent or concluding the Song with AMEN ver 4. c. In the Latter rejoycing is noted First the provoking cause and of this 1. What it was A voyce proceeding out of the Throne 2. What it commanded viz. to praise the Lord 3. Who are commanded All the servants of God in generall verse 5. Secondly the effect of the cause is annexed viz. The rejoycing it selfe in which is noted 1. Who the Rejoycers were A great multitude whose voyce is aggravated by the similitude of the noise of waters and thunders ver 6. This multitude are the Servants and Fea●ers of God that is the Vniversall Church of Saints in Heaven and Earth 2. A Gratulatorie Hyinne consisting of two Parts In the first they blesse God with praises of Hallelujah adding a reason For the Lord God omnipotent reigneth that is hath vindicated his Kingdome from the blasphemies of Antichrist verse 6. Secondly they stirre up themselves to joyfullnesse and to praise the Lord Let us rejoyce with a reason from the joyfull circumstance of time for the marriage of the Lambe is come The which they commend 1. from the presence of the Bride or wife she hath made herselfe ready c. ver 7. 2. From her ornament and pure attire ver 8. And to her was granted 3. From the saving effect or blessednesse of
silence their blasphemous mouthes by confessing that the Lord in punishing of them is not tyrannicall in the least but a most righteous Iudge For it is just to give every one his own but in order of justice punishment for wickednesse is due to the ungodly When therefore God punisheth them his judgements are righteous And true that is certainely to be accomplished for though God doth a long while delay the punishments threatned against the wicked yet at length he truly executes the same So Psal 9 v. 9. Jehovah judgeth the world in righteousnesse he ministers judgement to the people in uprightnesse For he hath judged the great whore Specially they celebrate two examples of Gods righteousnesse as it were the neerest matter of their joy the condemnation of the great whore and the vindicating of the servants of God Both being manifestly worthy to be celebrated For that Great whore hath corrupted the earth by her fornication Now what is more agreeable to justice then that such a pest which hath defiled the inhabitants of the earth with her most filthy whoredome should be adjudged unto eternall damnation Moreover with her hand that is tyranically with fire and sword she hath oppressed killed the servants of God Now it is a righteous thing to avenge the innocent blood and such as are uniustly oppressed But God hath avenged the blood of his servants on the whore by rendring unto her such like punishments as she had before exercised For the destruction of the adversaries is the vindicating of the Saints Furthermore who this great whore is what her whoredoms what earth and how she hath corrupted the same need not on this place to be repeated Let us learne to acknowledge and celebrate Gods righteous judgements in destroying the adversaries And continuallie labour to walk with fear and trembling intreating the Lord that the like judgements fal not upon us 3. And again they said They conclude the thankesgiving by repeating the exhortation of Halleluiah to testifie the greatnesse of their joy They adde further And her smoake AND hath here an adversative sense as if he had said Yee praise God But the whore shall burne for ever and Ever Ribera interpreteth the smoake more coldly of the remembrance of the burning which saith he is alwaies to remaine and shall never be forgotten But they amplifie Gods judgement on the whore because the smoake of her burning and torment shall have no end but remaine for ever from Chap. 14. v. 11. And the smoak of their torment shall ascend up for ever and Ever signifying the everlasting torments that attend Antichrist and his followers in hell fire If perhaps the miserable Romanists by feare thereof might bee deterred from their Idolatrie Rose up for ever The present flame of her burning which they shall see with their eyes yeelds matter of joy Now the smoake ascendeth up Therefore Babylons condition is altogether deplorable 4 And the foure and twentie Elders The former Chore desisting another comes in singing that so God might be praised with a most sacred Symphonie of all the heavenly dwellers This was the company of Elders and Beasts often before mentioned Chap. 4.14 and Chap. 5.8 and Chap. 7. 11. and 11. 16. Here they serve as it were for a heavenly senate reverend in gravitie and majesty unto the former promiscuous multitude of the heavenly inhabitants whose joy and celebration of Gods judgements they approue of by their most grave acclamation closing up and as it were sealing the same in two words Amen Halleluiah as if they should say It is so as ye have before sung salvation and glory is truely due to our God His judgements are truely righteous Iust indeed is the condemnation of the whore and the vindicating of the innocent blood of the saints for Amen with the Hebrews is a particle confirming the truth and signifies Truely certainly God therefore is to be truely celebrated with praises Now who these Elders and Beasts are hath been largely declared on Chap. 4. and Chap. 5. The Elders represented the Company or Chore of Patriarchs and Prophets The Beasts the Apostles although as hath bin before shewed these may also be understood of the stationary Angels before the throne of God Whoever they bee certaine it is they are a more honourable company of the Church triumphant what the adoration of the heavenly inhabitants is For the Elders weare golden crownes on their heads and are clothed in white raiment holding harpes and golden vials in their hands c. And they sit upon foure and twenty thrones being as it were honorable administrators of the judgements and counsels of God But for reverence sake in this solemne assemblie they fall downe from their thrones on their faces before the feete of the divine Majesty casting off undoubtedly their crowns also as before Chap. 4.10 and religiously worship and adore God togither with the Beasts This adoration was an admiration of the powers of God a celebration of his judgments and workes a ready publishing of his mercies and lastly a testimony of their religious subjection In which they afford us an example of religious worship and thankesgiving For if the Saintes in heaven who are come to their journeyes end praise God incessantly how much more ought wee poore traveillers to worship the Lord without intermission Neither doe they adore one another but God sitting on the throne And therefore such as direct their worship unto others shall never come to this Chore of which thing the Angell will by and by instruct us 5 And a voyce came out of the throne Both companies had finished their Halleluiah notwithstanding the song of praises was not as yet ended Therefore another Chore is invited unto a new gratulation by another voyce A new voice out of the throne not of God sitting on the throne as before Chap. 14.13 A voyce from heaven and Chap. 16.17 A voyce out of the Temple The author of this voyce is not shewed being uncertaine yet we may easily gather that it was divine because it proceeds out of the throne yet not of God sitting but of the Lambe standing on the throne because he saith Praise our God Now Christ acknowledged God to be his and ours because he is the Lamb and Mediatour as if he should say The prayses of God touching his righteous judgements are not yet ended There remaine other works and benefits farre exceeding these judgements to be celebrated What these are the following Hymne shall teach us Now whom doth he invite All ye his servants The servants of God are all that are and shall be saved both Angels men For also the good Angels are preserved by grace in their integrity hence throughout the Scripturs they are named the servants of God as being spirits most ready to execute the ministries of God But as for men they are Gods servants both such who continually serve him with praises in heaven viz the saints triumphing with Christ as also who yet
from Heaven Satans punishment therefore is described by the place companions and eternity of his torments The place of his punishment shall not bee simply the Pit in which he was before shut up a thousand yeers but the very sinke of the bottomlesse Pit the Lake of fire and brimstome into which he shall be cast by Christ the Iudge It is a Periphrasis of hell which the Scripture sets forth by the place of torments unquencheable fire the worme that dies not utter darkenesse weeping and gnashing of teeth and such like horrible Epithites to terrifie the wicked signifying that the torments of Satan and the ungodly in hell shall be unutterable like as the glory of Christ and the Saints in Heaven shall bee unspeakeable Now of the Lake of Fire and Brimstone hath beene spoken Chap. 19 20. unto which place Iohn sends us backe saying Where the Beast and the False-prophet are For hee there saith that these were cast into this Lake The devill therefore shall find them there as his companions in torments The Romane Antichrist I say with his Cardinals Vassals and Followers These shall bee cast into the Lake before the devill for he shall finde them there yet both shall be done in the last Iudgement as Christ expounds it in the Gospell depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire which is prepared for the devill and his Angels Mat. 25.41 And they shall bee tormented To wit the devill the Beast and False-Prophet for they shall all alike suffer everlasting torments of which see Chap. 14.11 Chap. 19.20 Night and day Not as if there should be an enterchange of dayes and nights in Hell for in utter daakenesse it is alwayes night but thus he sheweth the eternall continuation of their torments for that which is continued day and night is perpetuall The same he saith Chap. 14. of the torments of all the worshippers of the Beast and his Image By the same phrase Chap. 7.15 he sheweth the continuall joy of the Saints in Heaven Who are before the throne of God and serve him day and night in his Temple Now that the punishment of the devill and wicked men shall be perpetuall Lib. 21. de C. D. c. 23. Ps 77.10 The punishment of the damned eternall Augustine doth largely prove against such as pretending Gods mercifullnes from the Psalme Will God forget to be gracious will he in anger shut up his tender mercies did imagine that the devill and wicked men after most grievous and long during punishments should be purged and pardoned thereby to patronize their owne and other mens wickednesses But he demonstrates from this and such like places that the torments of Satan and the ungodly shall simply be eternall First because here it s expresly said The devill which deceived them was cast into the Lake of fire and brimstone there to bee tormented with the Beast and the False-Prophet day and night for ever and ever which altogether signifies eternitie But it were false if at sometime or other they should be redeemed out of their torments Secondly Mat. 72.3 Mat. 25 4● What is meant by Eternall because the divine sentence cannot bee made voide or weakened which Christ will pronounce at the day of Iudgement depart from mee ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devill and his Angels what here is said to be for ever and ever in the place alledged is said to be eternall or everlasting by which the Scripture denotes time without end Lastly because the life and glory of the blessed Saints shall simply be eternall Therefore on the contrary the death and torments of the damned shall also bee eternall for Christ in the same sentence pronounceth to the wicked eternall torments Mat. 25.46 and to the godly life everlasting And these shall goe into everlasting punishment but the righteous into eternall life 11. AND I SAW A THRONE The Type of the universall Iudgement followeth in which all the wicked being cast into eternall torments the Church shall bee crowned with everlasting glory and joy Now that this is a description of the last Iudgement is so manifest from the words that I judge it needlesse to demonstrate the same It is proved that here the last judgement is typically set forth Mat. 25.46 1. Cor. 15.16 Dan. 7.10 Mat. 25 41 Iohn saw the Iudge on a Throne he saw the dead to be judged before the Throne and them that were judged out of the books being opened according to the phrase of the Prophet Dan. Chap. 7.10 where without all controversie the Type of the last Iudgement is described Lastly he saw the Devill Death and Hell which are the last Enemies to be cast with all reprobates into the Lake of Fire which certainely shall not come to passe but in the last Iudgement when the Iudge shall say unto all these Goe ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the devill and his Angels Neither ought we to seek an Allegorie in circumstances so manifestly agreeing with the Evangelicall History because it cannot here have place forasmuch as all things are sutable unto the proper description of the last Iudgement expressed in both Testaments Besides our method confirmes the same by which it hath hitherto bin shewed that every one of the Visions the first excepted which was speciall doth end in the description of the last Iudgement either openly or covertly the which why it should so often be iterated in this Booke cannot be explicated by them who give no heed unto the distinct Acts of the severall Visions Adde to this that all Interpreters whom I have seen both old and new are unnanimously minded that here is figured out the casting of all the adversaries into eternall punishment and the placing of the godly in everlasting glory which shall be accomplished in the last Iudgement Brightman alone leaving this exposition interprets the whole Brightmans Allegorie Allegorically of the full restitution of the Iewish Nation which he thinkes shall come to passe after the Dragon is cast into the Lake of fire that is after the destruction of the Turkish Emperour and Empire This hee supposeth shall be about the yeere 1690. moved hereunto by a conjecture too obscure and uncertaine from a place in Dan. 12.12 the which how far different a sense it beareth I shall not at this time for brevity sake stand to demonstrate But the reasons which he opposeth to the received and manifest trueth to me indeed seem to have little or no waight in them He saith that the following description agrees not unto the New Jerusalem in Heaven but to that on Earth only in that the Holy City is said to descend from Heaven that the Bride is prepared and adorned for her Husband not yet delivered that in ver 7. the reward is put off till afterward Whether the description of the new Ierusalem agrees to the Church Militant that one of the seven Angels sheweth all these things to Iohn whereas
and quarrels shall be farre from thence but on the contrary we shall sing to God everlasting Songs of joy Nor paine Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Labour which may be taken for any kind of trouble and metaphorically for Griefe as BEZA renders it after the Greeke Phrase Sophocl in Antig. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 griefe by griefe brings griefe But then there shall be no labour trouble paine or griefe of body or mind occasioning teares death sorrow or crying There shal be no cause of evill but on the contrary everlasting joy and pleasure at Gods right hand For the former or first things are passed away That is the miserable state of this present life in which all those evils doe abound because of sinne Then they shall passe or vanish away There shal bee a new heaven and a new earth A new state full of joy and happinesse Vnto the illustration of this place that in Chap. 7.15 helps very much where in the end of the second Vision one of the foure and twenty Elders explicated the Heavenly felicity of the Saints almost in the same words They are saith he before the throne of God and serve him day and night in his temple and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them they shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the Sunne light on them nor any heat for the Lambe that is in the midst of the throne shall feed them and shall lead them unto living fountaines of waters and God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes This place doth plainly confute their opinion who hold that here is treated of the state of the Church Militant in this world for it is certaine that this removall of all evils from the Church neither is nor shall be in this world neither is any such happinesse to be hoped for in this life but it is reserved for the Church in the world to come These things therefore cannot be applied unto the state of the Church on earth gathered of Iewes and Gentiles Neither do the Futures will dwell will take away contradict what wee say For these are retained emphatically out of the Prophesie as if he should say the things which Isaias foretold should come to passe shall bee then fulfilled the which the Verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are passed away in the Praeter Tense doth easily evince 5. And he that sate upon the throne Here followeth the voyce of the Sitter on the Throne of whom above Chap. 4. where wee shewed it was either the Holy Trinitie or the Son of God gloriously reigning at the right hand of God in Heaven because he saith I am Alpha and Omega which above in Chap. 1 8. was the voyce of Christ I am Alpha and Omega the First and the Last Now he confirmeth unto Iohn the things before seen and heard All things were new a New Heaven a New Earth a New Ierusalem Least we should doubt or aske whence this innovation should come Behold saith hee I make all things new This innovation of things shal be effected by the divine power Neither speaketh he of the spirituall renovation of the Church which began long agoe by the grace and power of Christ but of the super-naturall change of the whole universe which shal be at Christs last coming 2. Pet. 3.13 as Peter sheweth And hee saith to mee write The Verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith in the present Tense being the proper stile of the Evangelist Iohn argues that he was Authour of this Booke He is commanded to write this Vision of the future renovation and in speciall the most sweet voyce of Gods eternall abode with men and the future blessednesse of the godlie that it might allwayes remaine extant to future times for the Churches consolation for Christ knew that the Churches condition should unto the end be mournefull by teares death sadnesse paines c. Least therefore she might faint in her warfare the Lord would have this most joyfull Catastrophe of all evils to be set down in Holy Writ For these words are true and faithfull Above Chap. 19.9 after a like Commandement of writing Write blessed c. He annexed a like reason These words are true Here he addeth faithfull that none should doubt of the future happinesse Hee understands by WORDS here Gods future dwelling with men as also the eternall rewards of the faithfull and everlasting punishments of the wicked 6. And he said to mee It is done Above Chap. 16.17 the Angell of the seventh Viall in the same phrase proclaimed the end of Babylon and the whole world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 IT IS DONE It is a weighty asseveration that the thing is as certaine as if it were already accomplished I am Alpha and Omega As above Chap. 1.8.11 I will give unto him that is a thirst Hee confirmes eternall rewards unto the faithfull out of the Gospell For this is the voyce of Christ Ioh. 7.37 whence he that sate on the throne is knowne to bee Christ the Author of this Prophesie To them that thirst he promiseth the water of life freely that is everlasting joy without any desert of ours But then no man shall thirst any more But these Future Verbes I will give shall inherit and as before shall wipe away seeme to make against our opinion but they doe not as erewhile I shewed For because it is a Prophesie of future things he rightly useth Verbes of the future Tense He therefore that thirsteth to wit after righteousnesse in this life to him Christ will give the water of Life now in a beginning onely then fully as if hee should say then I will truely fulfill the Evangelicall promise of which I now grant a tast to the faithfull He that overcommeth shall inherit all things Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 receive it by inheritance Not therefore of merit but freely All things As it were an only Heire that possesseth all the substance of his Parents But all the Elect are heires and yet every one shall receive the whole inheritance Therefore this shall not be after the manner of other inheritances Now the inheritance is promised to him that overcommeth to wit the world the Beast and Satan because before the victory there must needs be a fight Therefore the Faithfull are here exhorted to fight couragiously against all their Adversaries See Chap. 2.10 And I will bee his God From 2. Sam. 7.14 He then at last promiseth to them that overcome the fulfilling of the promise of adoption which now by faith they possesse in hope Now are wee the sonnes of God but it doth not yet appeare what we shall bee but we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him for we shall see him as hee is This is Johns owne most true interpretation of this divine voyce 1. Ioh. 3.2 8. But the fearfull and unbeleeving From the contrary he extols the felicity of the Godly because contraries being set one by another
everlasting light But Everlastingnesse is not of this Life He saith also The dayes of thy mourning shal be ended Now the mourning of the Church shal not be ended in this Life but in the church-Church-Triumphant where God wil wipe away all teares from our eyes there I say shal be no longer mourning nor cry nor death nor sorrow as in ver 4. 24. And the Nations that were saved Thus much of the building and glory of the Citie Now also hee speakes of the Citizens who they shal bee what good things they shall enjoy and who shal be kept out of the same For the first he saith that the INHABITANTS of this Citie shall bee THE NATIONS THAT ARE SAVED consisting not onely of the common people but Kings also for he saith Kings shall walke in the light of it that is shall eternally enjoy the glorious presence and majesty of God How the nations are the City Citizens And the Kings of the earth do bring their glory and honour into this Citie Here first it is demaunded if this Citie bee the glorified Church how then are the Nations distinguished from the same seeing the Nations that are saved are nothing else but the Church it selfe I ANSWER The order of the Vision is to be observed for seeing he saw the glorified Church under the forme of a Citie it was convenient that hee should see also some Inhabitants of the Citie Although therefore the saved of the Nations be the Church it selfe Notwithstanding he doth not unfitly distinguish the Church taken collectively from the Church it selfe distributively considered for thus also an Earthly Citie may be collectively considered as a Common-weal or communitie of Citizens and distributively as many or particular Citizens Adde to this that the Nations are not the whole City for the Elect Patriarchs Prophets and Iewes belong also unto the same Secondly it may be demaunded how the Kings should bring their glory into this Heavenly Citie seeing all Authorities Kingdomes 1. Cor. 15.42 How kings shall bring their glorie into the heavenly Ierusalem and Powers shall then be put downe and that there shal be no Kings then and that in the Heavenly City no earthly thing can be brought Lastly seeing all shal rather receive their glory there then bring any into it Which seemeth to be the chiefest argument of them who hold that here is intended not the Heauenly but the Earthly glory of the CHURCH in this Life The Answer is easie First we are to note that this verse also is taken out of Isai 60.3 And the Gentiles saith he shall come to thy light and Kings to the brightnesse of thy rising the which is spoken indeed of the conversion of the Gentiles and Heathenish Kings But as before I said that whole Oracle speaketh not onely of the inchoated glory of the Church in this Life but with the beginning joynes the full accomplishment thereof that shal be in the Heavens as there it evidently appeareth in ver 11.18.19.21 Wherefore that place is to be applied unto the Heavenly Citie not as it began in this Life but as it shall be at last consummated in the life to come And the meaning is that then that oracle shall truely and perfectly bee fulfilled when as the Nations that are saved shall walke perfectly in the light of Jehovah And that the KINGS also who in this life have brought their glory and honour into the Church that is subjected themselves unto Christ shal enjoy the same light for ever and ever Therefore he intendeth not as if then there should be any Earthly Kings to bring their earthly glory into heaven for we shal al be Kings and Priests to God but that the Kings which now bring their glory to Christ shall together with the Nations walke in the light This sense is confirmed by the Participle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Saved So that then they shal be saved already and not afterwards Rom. 8.24 as yet beeing in this life I confesse we are saved also in this life but it is in hope But then they shal be saved in deed because they shall walke in the Everlasting light Thirdly also it may be demaunded How the kings of the earth are joyned unto the inhabitants of the heavenly Ierusalem seeing hitherto in the Revelation the Kings of the Earth are called for the most part enemies of Christ and followers of Antichrist Chap. 6.15 16.14 17.1.18 18.3.9 19 19. How they should here be reckoned among the Inhabitants of the Heavenly City ANSWER They are here called Kings of the Earth not that they shal be Kings when they enter into this City but because sometimes they were such For in Chap. 17.16 it appeareth that some if not all of the ten Kings of the earth which had given their power unto the Beast should desert the Beast eat the flesh of the whore and burne her with fire therefore some of them shal be converted unto the Lambe and with the Nations that are saved shall walke in the light of this Citie 25. The signes of assured peace And the gates of it shall not be shut This is the Second Part viz. the felicity and firme peace of the Citizens the which while Cities enjoy they flourish in riches and glory but the peace tranquility and security of this City shal be perfect and perpetuall This he sheweth by two signes One is because the gates shall not be shut by day But thou wilt say the gates of our Cities also are not shut by day It is so indeed in time of peace but in war the enemy besieging a City and labouring to break in of necessity the gates must be shut that the Citizens may be preserved from hostile invasion But the gates of the Citie on high shal not be shut by day but alwayes stand open to signifie that there shal be no danger of adversaries but everlasting peace to the Citizens thereof For there shall be no night there This is the other sign of their everlasting peace For in the night while the Citizens sleep the gates are shut least they should be set upon unawares in the dark There shall be no night because the glory of God shal expell the darknesse by everlasting light so that the rising or setting of the Sun or Moon shal not cause night or darknesse Therefore the Citizens shal never sleep or shut their gates for fear of danger These things being spoken after the manner of men do in some sort shadow out unto us that eternall security and peace which we shal enjoy in Heaven To this also is applied out of Isaias the 11. ver of the said 60. Chap. though there spoken in a sense somewhat different from what it is here Therefore thy gates shal be open continually they shall not be shut day nor night that they may bring unto thee the forces of the Gentiles and their Kings may bee brought where is signified another cause of not shutting
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
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The latter is understood in this place of a thing devoted to the devill and with him subject to condemnation as being prophane and to be troad under foot Such kind of Curse or Katanathema shall bee no more to wit as formerly it had been He understandeth the Dragon Beast Whore False-Prophet Locusts Sinne Death Sorrow Torment and whatsoever is adverse to Gods majesty and the felicity of the Church Indeed all kinde of Curse shall be in the Lake of fire with the Dragon Beast False-Prophet and all other reprobates but no curse shall be in the Coelestiall Citie or any thing to oppose the majesty of God or disturbe the joy of the Saints There I say shall be full freedome from all evill BEZA expresseth the Emphasis of the compound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Katanathema thus Neither shal there be any more anathema 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against any man making the sense that then the Church shall be without all spot or wrinkle from which it cannot in this life be wholly purged Thus it should note the absolute puritie of the Church in glorie of which also before Nothing that defileth shall in any wise enter into it Both senses do agree and lead us to understand these things of the state of the church-Church-Triumphant For of the Church in this life it cannot yet be said that no curse or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is in it It is true that Zacharie in Chap. 14. ver 11. saith that in the Church of the New Testament there should be no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Curse or devoted thing but he understands it finally or of the consummated state of the Church in Heavenly glory But the Throne of God and of the Lambe shall be in it This shall bee the removing cause of all curse from the Citie because it shall be filled with the majesty of God and of the Lambe which consumeth all pollution and averse power as fire doth the stubble For our God is a consuming fire to wit Deutr. 4.8 consuming all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things cursed devoted Therefore he saith The Seat or Throne of God shall be in it that is God will dwell reigne and reside there as it were in his Royall Pallace which is spoken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after the manner of men For by the Seat is noted either the place of abode or government Before he had said Chap. 21.3 He shall have his tabernacle with them Seeing therefore the King of kings shall fill the Citie with majesty certainly neither defilement nor hostilitie shall have any place there Thus we see that this most holy Citie of God shall be contrary to the Great Citie where the Whore Beast Dragon and all ungodly men had their Seat In that again he placeth God and the Lamb on the same throne XLIV Argument of Christs Deity he manifestly confirmeth that the divinity and majesty of both is alike For two Vnaequals cannot sit in the same Seat He confirms also the unity of both by what followes And his servants shall serve him for the Relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 HIS and HIM is referred neither to GOD alone nor to the LAMBE alone but to both as one By the servants of God and the Lambe he understands the Holy Angels and blessed Saints who standing before the throne do serve him day and night as in Chap. 7.15 that is are ready with all reverence alacrity and joy to doe his Commandements and performe most acceptable services according to his will not that God needs their service but that they may partake of his majesty This shall be a part of our glory and happinesse 1. Kin. 10.8 2. Chr. 9.7 for if the Queene of the South said truely of Solomons servants Blessed are thy men and blessed are thy servants who stand before thee alwayes hearing thy wisedome c. then much more ought wee to count the servants of God blessed who stand before the throne beholding his face without ceasing Therefore it followeth 4. And they shall see his face Christ speaking of the Angels blessednesse saith The happinesse of the Citizens Mat. 18.10 They alwayes behold the face of my father in Heaven The same thing the Holy Ghost attributes to all Gods servants namely to be alwayes before God By the face of God is meant by an Anthropopatheia the majesty and glory of God Now how we shall see him whither with our minds onely being most fully enlightned with the knowledge of God or whither also with our corporall eyes we shall behold the invisible majesty of God in the glorious face of Christ it is not for us to determine It sufficeth to know the thing it selfe that we shall see God and the Lambe and that this shall be our unspeakable blessednesse Mat. 5.8 1. Ioh. 3.2 Heb. 12.14 according as it is said Blessed are the pure in heart because they shall see God And When he shall appeare we shall be like him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because we shall see him as hee is And follow peace and holinesse without which no man shall see God that is no man shall obtaine Heavenly blessednesse without the same Let us willingly bee ignorant of the manner of seeing him untill we know it by experience Thom. 4. qu. 92. wherefore we passe by these Questions of School-men Whither we shall see God through his essence whither with the bodily eye whither by seeing God we shall see all things which God seeth and the like as too curious and high for us And his Name shall be in their foreheads The Relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His is againe referred to God and the Lambe Therefore the Name of both is the same Before also Christ writing to the Churches of Pergamus and Philadelphia promised that this should be a part of their happinesse Rev. 2.17 3.12 to have his Name written on them that overcome and of this John saith Chap. 19.12 No man knew it but himselfe This Name saith he shall be written in their foreheads by which some doe understand the publicke profession wherewith we shall alwayes praise God and the Lambe Others take it to be the Saints participating of the divine nature wisdome life power joy and glory It seemes to be an allusion unto the Character of the Beast imprinted on the right hand and fore-head of Reprobates Now that what was it but a note of propriety that they did properly belong to the Beast On the contrary therefore the Name written in the fore-heads of the Saints what shall it be but a marke of propriety that we shal be consecrated to the service and praising of God and the Lamb for ever and ever 5. And there shall no be night there What before he said of the light of the Citie he now applies to the happinesse of the Inhabitants The darknesse of the night is sad and though it in some measure be supplied by lights and Candles yet
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
rendred 75. Benevenutus Rambaldus a worthy historian 128. Bernhardus Clarevallensis his invectives against the Pope and Clergie more then 464 years agoe 318. Beryl growing in the Indies 565. Bellarmin touching the libertie of the will either to admit or exclude God knocking and perswading refuted 81 c. Bellarmins arguments answered 222. Bellarmins subtilties answered 321. Brightmans coniecture touching the time of the Turks power considered 188. His opinion of the flood of waters 278. His allegoriall exposition 541. Bishops why called stars and Angels 27. Bishops have no Apostolicall power 20. Bishops or teachers of Churches how they are said to be in the hand of Christ 31. Bishops must flee ambition and covetousnesse 33. many Bishops though in appearance pious are meer hypocrites 55. The Bishops did augment the sicknesse and palenesse of the Church above measure 117. 118. Romane Bishops ever since Pope silvester have striven to Lord it over their fellowes 126 127. Blasphemie what it is 290. Blasphemie of the Romane Beast 299. Blasphemie against Marie 300. Blasphemous verses of Carolus scribanius touching the milke of Marie and the blood of Christ 301. Whither the Black horse denotes hereticks 112. It denotes the Church made black with heresies ibid. The Black horse hath Christ with a ballance on him ibid. The Blasphemous title of Pope Paulus V. doth expresselie contain the number of the Beast 297. 323. Blood in the moon whence 128. The Booke of Gods providence 60. and of vniversall Iudgement ibid. The Book containing the matters which Christ revealed unto Iohn touching the last times is the Revelation it selfe 96. The open book is that which was shut before 199. The book eaten up by Iohn 207. what it meaneth ibid. The book of life 60 302. 544. Books how attributed to God in scripture 60. The books of the Ancients were rolled up 97. Bondmen and free men denote all adversaries of inferiour ranck 132. Boniface III. first established monarchicall tyrannie 118. being declared vniversall bishop by Phocas 127. 244. Boniface VIII a loftie tyrant 129. The Bow of Christ is the Law and the Gospell 108. Brimstone and hell fire 352. Bullingers opinion of the flood 278. To Buy white raiment what it is 79. C. CAlamities why foretold 126. Calling of Evangelicall preachers 378. Candidati Romans so called and why 79. Carkeyses of the witnesses what they are and how they shall lie in the streets of Rome 233. Carkeyses of the witnesses unburied 240. The Campe of the saints is the Christian world 537. Catastrophe of the Churches calamities under Antichrist 106. The Cause of Gods connivence is both his benignitie leading the wicked to repentance as also his counsell for the completing of the number of Martyrs 121. 122 Catholick Character 312. Character of the Beast 315. 314. his two fold Character ibid. Character and Charagma how they differ 312. The proper and common Character how they differ 315. Causes of Babylons ruine 455. Chaenix a measure containing a dayes provision for one man 114. Certaintie of the saintes salvation 527. Chalcedonie 564. Chalcolibanum or fine brasse 24. Chiliarchi are captains of thousands 123. Chiliasts or millenaries their ancient opinion 524. the author of it Papias ibid. the refutation thereof 525 531. The ground of their errour 515. their corrupting of the text ibid. The Chore or company of Patriarchs Prophets saints Iudges and kings represented by the four and twentie Elders 90. Chore of the 24 Elders 248. Christ why called Amen 75. Hath future things revealed unto him as he is man 3.4 is Lord of the Angels 5. his dietie more expresselie testified by no canonicall writer then by the Evangelist Iohn 5. his three fold office and benefits 10.13 His comming why promised 15. He appeared in an humane shape in the middest of the seven candlesticks 22. He opens and no man shutteth 64. How he is like to the Son of man 23.24 How he attributes the simile of a thief unto himself 57. Is called a Lambe in respect of his humility and office 100. Is our fine linen and wedding robe 482. He is the faithfull witnesse and so called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 10.11 Is the first begotten from the dead 11. and Prince of the kings of the earth 12. He cleanseth us from our sinnes two manner of wayes 13. His body doth not lie hid invisibly under the host 15. He is the onelie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or merchant offering unto us spirituall wares of salvation 78. His philanthropie 80. His righteousnesse is the white robe 79. How he suppeth with us 80. His proper titles 88. Is represented to Iohn under divers figures 88. By his spirituall scepter he forceth the adversaries unto obedience 103.104 He is the Lyon of the tribe of Iudah 109. Hath the seven spirits in his hands 54. Js author of the ministrie ibid. He attributes life to himself 26. Is divided by the Lutherans 44. How he shall deliver up the kingdome to the father and reigne for ever 248. He is alpha and omega 587. The root of David the morning star 593. Is compared to a traveller knocking at our dore 80. How he is heard and let in with the benefit thereof ibid. He is the beginning of the creation of God actively and passivelie 75. Why he would rather have men cold then Lukewarm 76. What is meant by the open booke in his hand 199. Christ and Antichrist have the key of the bottomlesse pit in different respects 172. 502. Christians miscalled by the Romanes 17. Church Church discipline in its vigor in the primitive times 32. the Churches adversaries sometimes converted 67. Whether the Church may be removed 35. her abode uncertain 36. she was preserved in the Papacie 43. she sometimes lies hid in the world ibid. she must reprove notorious and scandalous sectaries 44. The Church of the called and the Elect doth differ 55. The Church abounding in idlenesse and riot heathenish and Iewish rites were brought in 76. The Churches condition in this world was alwayes red with persecution 111. She became black in the first 200 yeeres 112. And pale even to death 117. was preserved in the midst of the Papacie 139. Where she was before Luther 142. she could erre for she needed measuring 213. Why she is represented by the figure of a woman 257. her variable condition in this world 258. How she changed her sun-like clothing into purple 259. Vanishing as the moon 265. The Church triumphant her song 268. How long the Church was in the wildernesse 276. Whether there were no Church vnder Antichrist 329. Her condition at first 358. Before Luther the Church was in Babylon 459. The Church is the bride of the Lamb and citie of God 560. Why Compared to Candlesticks 27. and sometime to a vineyard 363. Chrysolite 565. Chrysoprasus whence it takes its name ibid. Chrystal what it signifies 506. Cities of the nations what they are 400. the beloved city is the Church 537. Clemanges his speech of Rome 4●4 Clement
at Euphrates 187. the four Angels at the four corners of the earth who they be 136. 137. The Four Acts of the second vision 84. The Fourty two moneths designe the time of Antichristian persecution 216. diverse opinions about them 217. 218. 219. 220. The Foure yeeres reigne of Antichrist refuted 231. Franciscus Petrarcha against the Romish Sea 235. 319. 320. The Full assurance of faith and perseverance proved against Popish Sophisters 46. 47. 71. 269. The Full sight of God and of Christ shall be at the last day 120. G. GAbriel its signification 98. Gagnaeus refuted 20. 133. Garments not defiled Metaphorically denote sincerity and purity of the body 58. The Gesture and habit of the Beast what it denotes 102. The Gesture and voice of mourners 465. Glory how ascribed to God 93. how given to him 480. Glorification of the witnesses 243. Glory and honour of the nations 571. The Godhead of Christ demonstrated and proved against Hereticks 3. 4. 5. 12. 15. 16. 26. 27. 31. 37. 40. 42. 43. 47. 50. 54. 62. 64. 65. 75. 78. 80. 88. 99. 100. 102. 103. 104. 133. 149. 369. 437. 492. 493. 542. 543. 568. 577. 581. 586. 587. 592. GOD. His names are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 9. His benignity the cause of forbearance 121. God and Satan do the same thing after a diverse manner and end 41. He detesteth pollutions 50. Will have Chast and holy worshippers ibid. He is holy and loveth holynesse he is true and loveth truth 64. How he reigneth and shall reigne 479. He never neglects the prayers of his servants 121. How he worketh in the hearts of men 444. He is not the authour of sin 446. 447. How he puts good and evill into the hearts of Kings ibid. and 448. His ordination is not that we should obtain life eternall by the Merits of works 250. God alone is to be worshipped 342 God hath a people in Babylon 459. God forgets not the blasphemies of the wicked 121. Godfrey of Bullen Generall of the Holy warr 190. 537. Gog and Magog who with the Papists 533. 534. Their fiction refuted ibid. They are the four Angels of Euphrates 536. Gogish warre how occasioned and when it began 537. Gold tried in the fire what it signifies 78. The Golden censer what it noteth 154. it is cast into the earth 155. The Golden girdle what it noteth 371. The Gospel preached is the sword wounding the beasts head 296. this sword accidentally takes away peace from the earth raiseth cruell persecutions 111. The Gospel is the word of the Crosse 32. Good works how great soever merit no reward because they are debts 59. They merit not life Eternall 545. Good men stand in need of often admonishings 33. Gratianus a Popish parasite 52. The Great Dragon described 260. How he differs from the Beast ibid. Why he devoured not the Man-child 264. The Great city is Rome 233. 234. The Great day of wrath is the last day 134. The Great number of sealed ones 142. the Great multitude represents the Church Triumphant 146. The Great Star falling from heaven whom it denoteth 170. Grecian Empire overthrown by the Turks 192. Green grasse trees what they signify 178 Gregorie II. bereaved the Emperor Leo of his revenewes 130. Gregorie VII an exquisite instrument of Satan 532. He was the first Antichrist ibid. He affirmed that married Priests were Nicolaitans ibid. He deposed the Emperor Henry IV. 532. 533. Gregorie the Great perceiving Antichrist to be at hand pointed as with the finger at his successor Boniface the III. 318. The Greek reading vindicated from the insultation of Gagnaeus and Ribera 12. H. HArpers how they overcame the beast 366. whither they be martyrs or professors 367. Harpes of God are by an He●●aisme put for Excellent harpes 368. Hailstones of a Talent waight 401. Happinesse of the Celestiall Citizens 135 577. To Have part in the first resurrection 526 Heads and hornes of the dragon whom they denote 260. 261. The Healing of the beasts wound 294. 296. The heaven rolled up is the Church apostating 130. Heaven departing is the closing of the scriptures in Poperie 130. Hereticks in several ages 112. 113. Hesperus and Lucifer that is the morning and the evening star is one 593. Hieroms observation of the titles of the Revelation 3. His opinion of the seats of the four and twenty Elders 89. He approues not the Iesuiticall fiction 431 Hierom refuted ibid. Hieracites heresie 334. refuted ibid. Hierusalem is not the Great Citie 236. The Holy Citie troden down by the Gentiles is the church 215. The Holy war was the occasion of the Gogish warre 537. Hoe his consequence against the Calvenists refuted 36. Homicide of the Papists 193. Hornes what they denote 100. Hornes of the Golden Altar 187. Hornes like the Lambs 307. The ten Hornes springing out of the seventh head 432. They denote Christian kingdoms 435. Hour of temptation 69. The profit and end of temptation 69. 70. How it stands with pietie and Charitie to stir up the saints to revenge 461. 462. Husse burnt at Constance 226. his prophesie of Luther ibid. Humane traditions a burden imposed by Satan 51. How much is to attributed vnto the antiquitie of traditions 524. The Hyacinth 565. its colour 189. Hypocrisie what it is 55. Hypocrites deceive not God but men ibid. Hypocrisie must be avoyded as a pest ibid. Hypocrites are mixt among the saints 71. are compared to lukewarme water 77. Many of the Clergie are Hypocrite● ibid. They imagine that they are just and holy ibid. are very quick-sighted in outward things 78. They put not on Christ by baptisme and the supper ibid. Hydra Lernea a strange Monster 260. I. IAsper a precious stone 87. 564. Idoles described 193. Idolatrie of the Eastern-nations 192. Of the Papists 193. who in Idolatry exceed the Egyptians 234. why Idolatry is compared to wine 350. Iehovah the sacred name of God distinguishing him from all false Gods 203. What it signifies 8. Iesuites affirme that Iohn did not evill in falling down before the Angel 484. 485. Iesuites bafling 420. They againe roll up the open book of the scripture 130. Iezabell a false prophetesse 48. Her doctrine 49. Ignatius his Epistle to the Philadelphians 62. Ilands denote peoples and nations 130 how they were moved out of their places ibid. Image of the beast 310. 311. hath life put into it by the dragon 312. Image of babylon 311. the beasts Image excels that of babylon 312. Images of Christ and the saintes are not to be set up in temple 23. Impatience and desire of revenge how it can be in the souls of the saints in heaven 120. Impotencie of all creatures 99. Imprinting of the Charactar on the right hand 312. 313. Impure spirits 394. Incompassing what it signifies 537. The Infirmities of the saints Gods clemencie passeth by 44. Incense what it is 155. The Inflicting of punishment on impostors belongs to God alone 50. The Individuall communion of the Saints with the Lamb 3●6
happinesse in a fourfold degree First They are before the Throne of God that is they enjoy eternally the sight of God have a blessed and happy communion with him Secondly They serve him day night that is they allwayes worship him in celebrating his glorie majestie This service is the glorious liberty of the sons of God In his temple In Chap. 21.22 it is said that the heavenlie Ierusalem hath no temple viz. a material one for the Lord God allmighty the Lamb are the temple of it Thirdly Christ shall dwell among them Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is shall cover them as with a shadow under whose wing they shall safely sweetly rest themselves The Latine version renders it shall dwell over them the which Beza also in his first edition followed and not a misse The sence is they shall eternally enjoy the favour grace and glory of God 16. They shall hunger no more The two former degrees noted their positive good The two latter the evils they shall be freed from taken out of Isai 49.10 For hunger thirst heat are by a synecdoche put for all the defects wants and troubles of this life Wherefore as the third degree of glory signifyes their freedom from the wants of this miserable life so the fourth shewes that they shal be no more afflicted with any troubles or calamities For in scripture the heat of the sun is put for persecution Matt. 13.21 17. For the Lambe shall feed them These words containe a reason of this so great felicity freedom from former defects they shall not hunger for the Lambe will feed them who is both a saviour in redeeming them and a sheepheard in feeding his sheep to life eternal The food of this present life is one thing that of the life to come is another viz. satiety of joyes in his presence and pleasures in his right hand for ever Nor thirst for the same Lambe will lead them to the fountaines of living waters as we shall see in Chap. 22. 1. And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes A metaphor taken from mothers who not onely lay their infants crying for hunger or thirst to the breast but are wont also to wipe of their tears from their eyes of which also see Chap. XXXIII Argum. of Christs deity 21.4 Now here let us take notice of a XXXIII argument proving the Deity of the Lambe And it is twofold 1. He that feedeth the elect with life eternal leads them to the fountaines of living waters is Iehovah God Isai 49.10 Psal 23.1.2 Ezech. 34.14.15 But this the Lambe doth as wee see in this place Ergo c. 2. He that wipes away all teares and feedeth the elect is the same God Iehovah Esa 25.8 and 49.10 but the Lamb feedeth wipes away all teares Isai 25.9.10 Lo this is our God wee have waited for him and he will save us this is Jehovah c. Ergo c. The Preface on the third Vision contained in Chap. VIII IX X. XI THe second vision is ended at the opening of the seventh seal Now followes the third vision concerning seven Angels with seven trumpets containing more dreadfull apparitions then hitherto we have heard What is signified by them the same being very obscure interpreters are diversly minded Yet herein they all agree that the persecutions of the world the afflictions of the godly punishments of the wicked are prefigured But what and after what manner they are herein they much differ For here is wisdome indeed neyther can any man fully declare the meaning of them except Iohn himself to whom they were revealed by the spirit were present to interpret the same To the end therefore we may in some measure attaine to the knowledge of these mysteries lifting up our eyes in the first place for the Lords assistance Let the observation before spoken of be as a leading starre unto us viz. that as the end of the second vision was the catastrophe or change of the Churches calamities in the last day so likewise this third vision endeth at the last judgement Chap. 11.17 Whence we gather for tertaine that here again in a general way is represented under new mysteries the historie of the state of the Church the enemies thereof unto the end of the world For this vision takes its beginning at the casting of the censer full of fire of the altar The beginning and ending of this vision The third vision is universall upon the earth that is from the time the holy Ghost first fell upon the Apostles it is ended in the description of the last judgement This vision therefore is also universall consisting of four Acts and is of the same argument or nature with the former vision prefiguring the successe of the preaching of the Gospell what enemies the Church should have what battels should befall the godly teachers in the world especially under the kingdome of Antichrist also comfort and remedie by which the godly ought to raise up themselves in the midst of so great confusions Now in this it differeth from the former The difference between the second and third vision in that the types are different which for the most part doe more clearly represent some speciall events to wit the apostasy of certain eminent teachers and the rising of Antichrist both in the East and West For the sound of the trumpet in scripture hath a plain analogie to the preaching of the Gospell Isa 27.13 58.1 Hos 8.1 And lastly the four Acts of this vision are somwhat differing more clearly set down then the foregoing The first Act in the sound of sixe trumpets shadows out the state of the Church and the godly in this world The four Acts of vision III. not onely during the first sixe hundred yeers unto Antichrist as before but furthermore it describeth the rising raigne both of the Eastern and Western Antichrists The Western under the figure of a star falling from heaven of locusts proceeding out of the smoake of the bottomlesse pit But the Easterne under the forme of a very great army of horsmen and withall it deploreth the great evils wherewith these two enemies should afflict both the Church and astonish the inhabitants of the whole earth This Act is extended from the blowing of the first trumpet or promulgation of the Gospell untill the councill of Constans during the space of 1382 yeeres or rather untill the time of the reformation of doctrine by Luther Anno 1482. in Chapters VIII IX The second Act subalternate to the former is consolatory teaching us that notwithstanding the violent rage cruelties of both these Antichrists yet Christ will keep the booke open having his foot upon the earth upon the sea and alawayes preserving a Church unto himself Chap. X. The third Act prefigureth new battles of the two witnesses or reformers of the Church in the last times And also the great