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Apocalypse
Apocalypse, from
the verb άποκαλύπτω
(apokalypto), to reveal, is the name given to the last book in the
Bible. Protestants call it the Book of Revelation, the title which it
bears in the King James Version. Although a Christian work, the
Apocalypse belongs to a class of literature dealing with
eschatological subjects and much in vogue among the Jews of the first
century before, and after, Christ.
AUTHENTICITY
The author of
the Apocalypse calls himself John. "John to the seven churches
which are in Asia" (Ap., i, 4). And again, "I, John, your
brother and your partner in tribulation, . . . was in the island,
which called Patmos, for the word of God" (i, 9). The Seer does
not further specify his personality. But from tradition we know that
the Seer the Apocalypse was John the Apostle, the son of Zebedee, the
Beloved Disciple of Jesus. At the end of the second century the
Apocalypse was acknowledged by the historical representatives of the
principal churches as the genuine work of John the Apostle. In Asia,
Melito, Bishop of Sardis, one of the Seven Churches of the
Apocalypse, acknowledged the "Revelation of John" and wrote
a commentary on it (Eusebius, Hist. Eccl., IV, 26). In Gaul, Irenaeus
firmly believes in its Divine and Apostolic authority (Adversus
Haer., V, 30). In Africa, Tertullian frequently quotes Revelation
without apparent misgivings as to its authenticity (C. Marcion, III,
14, 25). In Italy, Bishop Hippolytus assigns it to the Apostle St.
John, and the Muratorian Fragment (a document about the beginning of
the third century) enumerates it along with the other canonical
writings, adding, it is true, apocryphal Apocalypse of St. Peter, but
with the clause, quam quidam ex nostris in ecclesia legi nolunt. The
Vetus Itala, moreover, the standard Latin version in Italy and Africa
during the third century, contained the Apocalypse. In Egypt, Clement
and Origen believed without hesitation in its Joannine authorship.
They were both scholars and men of critical judgment. Their opinion
is all the more valuable as they had no sympathy with the millennial
teaching of the book. They contented themselves with an allegorical
interpretation of certain passages but never ventured to impugn its
authority. Approaching more closely the apostolic age we have the
testimony of St. Justin Martyr, about the middle of the second
century. From Eusebius (Hist. Eccl., IV, xviii, 8), as well as from
his dialogue with the Jew, Tryphon (c. 81), held in Ephesus, the
residence of the apostle, we know that he admitted the authenticity
of the Apocalypse. Another witness of about the same time is Papias,
Bishop of Hierapolis, a place not far from Ephesus. If he himself had
not been a hearer of St. John, he certainly was personally acquainted
with several of his disciples (Eusebius, Hist. Eccl., III, 39). His
evidence however is but indirect. Andreas, Bishop of Caesarea, in the
prologue to his commentary on the Apocalypse, informs us that Papias
admitted its inspired character. From the Apocalypse undoubtedly
Papias derived his ideas of the millennium, on which account Eusebius
decries his authority, declaring him to have been a man of limited
understanding. The apostolic writings which are extant furnish no
evidence for the authenticity of the book.
ARGUMENTS
AGAINST ITS AUTHENTICITY
The Alogi,
about A.D. 200, a sect so called because of their rejection of the
logos-doctrine, denied the authenticity of the Apocalypse, assigning
it to Cerinthus (Epiphanius, LI, ff, 33; cf. Iren., Adv. Haer., III,
11, 9). Caius, a presbyter in Rome, of about the same time, holds a
similar opinion. Eusebius quotes his words taken from his
Disputation: "But Cerinthus by means of revelations which he
pretended were written by a great Apostle falsely pretended to
wonderful things, asserting that after the resurrection there would
be an earthly kingdom" (Hist. Eccl., III, 28). The most
formidable antagonist of the authority of the Apocalypse is
Dionysius, Bishop of Alexandria, disciple of Origen. He is not
opposed to the supposition that Cerinthus is the writer of the
Apocalypse. "For", he says, "this is the doctrine of
Cerinthus, that there will be an earthly reign of Christ, and as he
was a lover of the body he dreamed that he would revel in the
gratification of the sensual appetite". He himself did not adopt
the view that Cerinthus was the writer. He regarded the Apocalypse as
the work of an inspired man but not of an Apostle (Eusebius, Hist.
Eccl., VII, 25). During the fourth and fifth centuries the tendency
to exclude the Apocalypse from the list of sacred books continued to
increase in the Syro-Palestinian churches. Eusebius expresses no
definite opinion. He contents himself with the statement: "The
Apocalypse is by some accepted among the canonical books but by
others rejected" (Hist. Eccl., III, 25). St. Cyril of Jerusalem
does not name it among the canonical books (Catech. IV, 33-36); nor
does it occur on the list of the Synod of Laodicea, or on that of
Gregory of Nazianzus. Perhaps the most telling argument against the
apostolic authorship of the book is its omission from the Peshito,
the Syrian Vulgate. But although the authorities giving evidence
against the authenticity of the Apocalypse deserve full consideration
they cannot annul or impair the older and unanimous testimony of the
churches. The opinion of its opponents, moreover, was not free from
bias. From the manner in which Dionysius argued the question, it is
evident that he thought the book dangerous as occasioning crude and
sensual notions concerning the resurrection. In the West the Church
persevered in its tradition of apostolic authorship. St. Jerome alone
seemed to have been influenced by the doubts of the East.
THE APOCALYPSE
COMPARED WITH THE FOURTH GOSPEL
The relation
between the Apocalypse and the Fourth Gospel has been discussed by
authors, both ancient and modern. Some affirm and others deny their
mutual resemblance. The learned Alexandrine Bishop, Dionysius, drew
up in his time a list of differences to which modern authors have had
little to add. He begins by observing that whereas the Gospel is
anonymous, the writer of the Apocalypse prefixes his name, John. He
next points out how the characteristic terminology of the Fourth
Gospel, so essential to the Joannine doctrine, is absent in the
Apocalypse. The terms, "life", "light", "grace",
"truth", do not occur in the latter. Nor did the crudeness
of diction on the part of the Apocalypse escape him. The Greek of the
Gospel he pronounces correct as to grammar, and he even gives its
author credit for a certain elegance of style. But the language of
the Apocalypse appeared to him barbarous and disfigured by solecisms.
He, therefore inclines to ascribe the works to different authors
(Hist. Eccl., VII, 25). The upholders of a common authorship reply
that these differences may be accounted for by bearing in mind the
peculiar nature and aim of each work. The Apocalypse contains visions
and revelations. In conformity with other books of the same kind,
e.g. the Book of Daniel, the Seer prefixed his name to his work. The
Gospel on the other hand is written in the form of an historical
record. In the Bible, works of that kind do not bear the signature of
their authors. So also as regards the absence of Joannine terminology
in the Apocalypse. The object of the Gospel is to prove that Jesus is
the life and the light of the world, the fullness of truth and grace.
But in the Apocalypse Jesus is the conqueror of Satan and his
kingdom. The defects of grammar in the Apocalypse are conceded. Some
of them are quite obvious. Let the reader but notice the habit of the
author to add an apposition in the nominative to a word in an oblique
case; e.g. iii, 12; xiv, 12; xx, 2. It further contains some Hebrew
idioms: e.g. έρχόμενος
(erchomenos) equivalent to the הבא,
"the one that is to come", instead of έσόμενος
(esomenos), i, 8. But it should be borne in mind that when the
Apostle first came to Ephesus he was, probably wholly ignorant of the
Greek tongue. The comparative purity and smoothness of diction in the
Gospel may be adequately accounted for by the plausible conjecture
that its literary composition was not the work of St. John but of one
of his pupils. The defenders of the identity of authorship further
appeal to the striking fact that in both works Jesus is called the
Lamb and the Word. The idea of the lamb making atonement for sin by
its blood is taken from Isaias, liii. Throughout the Apocalypse the
portraiture of Jesus is that of the lamb. Through the shedding of its
blood it has opened the book with seven seals and has triumphed over
Satan. In the Gospel Jesus is pointed out by the Baptist as the "Lamb
of God . . . him who taketh away the sin of the world" (John, i,
29). Some of the circumstances of His death resemble the rite
observed in the eating of the paschal lamb, the symbol of redemption.
His crucifixion takes place on the selfsame day on which the Passover
was eaten (John xviii, 28). Whilst hanging on the cross, His
executioners did not break the bones in His body, that the prophecy
might be fulfilled: "no bone in it shall be broken" (John,
xix, 36). The name Logos, "Word", is quite peculiar to the
Apocalypse, Gospel and first Epistle of St. John. The first sentence
of the Gospel is, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word
was with God, and the Word was God". The first epistle of St.
John begins, "That which was from the beginning which we have
heard . . . of the word of life". So also in the Apocalypse,
"And his name is called the Word of God" (xix, 13).
TIME AND PLACE
The Seer
himself testifies that the visions he is about to narrate were seen
by him whilst in Patmos. "I John . . . was in the island which
is called Patmos, for the word of God and for the testimony of Jesus"
(i. 9). Patmos is one of the group of small islands close to the
coast of Asia Minor, about twelve geographical miles from Ephesus.
Tradition, as Eusebius tells us, has handed down that John was
banished to Patmos in the reign of Domitian for the sake of his
testimony of God's word (Hist. Eccl., III, 18). He obviously refers
to the passage "for the word of God and for the testimony of
Jesus" (i, 9). It is true that the more probable meaning of this
phrase is, "in order to hear the word of God", etc., and
not "banished because of the word of God", etc., (cf. i.
2). But it was quite natural that the Seer should have regarded his
banishment to Patmos as prearranged by Divine Providence that in the
solitude of the island he might hear God's word. The tradition
recorded by Eusebius finds confirmation in the words of the Seer
describing himself as "a brother and partaker in tribulation"
(i, 9). Irenaeus places the Seer's exile in Patmos at the end of
Domitian's reign. "Paene sub nostro saeculo ad finem Domitiani
imperii" (Adv. Haer., V. 4). The Emperor Domitian reigned A.D.
81-96. In all matters of Joannine tradition Irenaeus deserves
exceptional credit. His lifetime bordered upon the Apostolic age and
his master, St. Polycarp, had been among the disciples of St. John.
Eusebius, chronicling the statement of Irenaeus without any
misgivings, adds as the year of the Seer's exile the fourteenth of
Domitian's reign. St. Jerome also, without reserve or hesitation,
follows the same tradition. "Quarto decimo anno, secundam post
Neronem persecutionem movente Domitiano, in Patmos insulam relegatus,
scripsit Apocalypsim" (Ex libro de Script. Eccl). Against the
united testimony of these three witnesses of tradition the statement
of Epiphanius placing the Seer's banishment in the reign of Claudius,
A.D. 41-54, appears exceedingly improbable (Haer., li, 12, 33).
CONTENTS
(1) THE SEVEN
CHURCHES. Chap. i, 1-3. Title and description of the book. The
revelation made by Jesus the Messias to John. -- (i, 4-9). Salutation
prefatory to the seven Epistles, wishing the churches the grace and
the peace of God and Jesus. -- (i, 9-20). The vision of Jesus as the
Son of man. The portrait is taken from Dan., x, and Henoch, xlvi. Cf.
the phrases, "one like the son of man" (Ap., i, 13; Dan.,
x, 16, and vii, 13); "girded with gold" (Ap., i, 13; Dan.,
x, 5); "Eyes like flames of fire" (Ap., i, 14; Dan., x, 6);
"a voice like that of a multitude" (Ap., i, 15; Dan., x,
6); "I fell down like one senseless" (Ap., i, 17; Dan., x,
9); "and he touched me" (Ap., i, 17; Dan., x, 18); "hair
white like wool" (Ap., i, 14; Dan., vii, 9; Hen. xlvi, 1). --
Chap ii, 1-iii, 22. The Epistles, to the seven Churches. The Churches
are Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and
Laodicea. The Epistles are short exhortations to the Christians to
remain steadfast in their faith, to beware of false apostles and to
abstain from fornication and from meat offered to idols.
(2) THE BOOK
WITH THE SEVEN SEALS. Chaps. iv and v. The vision of God enthroned
upon the Cherubim. The throne is surrounded by twenty-four elders. In
the right hand of God is a scroll sealed with seven seals. In the
midst of the Cherubim and the elders the Seer beholds a lamb, "agnus
tamquam occisus", having on its throat the scar of the gash by
which it was slain. The Seer weeps because no one either in heaven or
on earth can break the seals. He is comforted on hearing that the
lamb was worthy to do so because of the redemption it had wrought by
its blood. The portrait of the throne is taken from Ezechiel, i.
Compare in both accounts the description of the four beasts. They
resemble a lion, an ox, a man, and an eagle. Their bodies are full of
eyes (cf. Ap., iv, 8; and Ez., x, 12). The twenty-four elders were
probably suggested by the twenty-four courses of priests ministering
in the Temple. The lamb slain for the sins of mankind is from Isaias,
liii.
Chaps. vi and vii.
The seven seals and the numbering of the Saints. At the opening of
four seals, four horses appear. Their colour is white, black, red,
and sallow, or green (χλωρός
(chloros) = ברד,
piebald). They signify conquest, slaughter, dearth and death. The
vision is taken from Zach., vi, 1-8. At the opening of the fifth seal
the Seer beholds the martyrs that were slain and hears their prayers
for the final triumph. At the opening of the sixth seal the
predestined to glory are numbered and marked. The Seer beholds them
divided into two classes. First, 144,000 Jews, 12,000 of every tribe.
Then a numberless multitude chosen from all nations and tongues.
Chaps. viii and ix. After the interval of about half an hour, the
seventh seal is broken; seven angels issue forth, each one holding a
trumpet. The sounding of the first four trumpets causes a partial
destruction of the elements of nature. One-third of the earth is
burned, as also one-third of the trees and all the grass. One-third
of the sea becomes blood (cf. Ex., vii, 17). One-third of the rivers
is turned into water of wormwood. One-third of the sun, moon, and
stars is obscured, causing one-third of the day to be dark (cf. Ex.,
x, 21). At the sounding of the fifth trumpet locusts ascend from the
abyss. Their work is to torment men for five months, They are
specially charged not to touch the grass. Their shape is that of
horses (Joel 2:4); their teeth like those of lions (Joel 1:6); their
hair like the hair of women. They have the tails of scorpions where
with to chastise man. The command over them is held by the Angel of
the Abyss, named Abaddon, the destroyer. At the sound of the sixth
trumpet the four angels chained at the Euphrates are let loose. They
lead forth an army of horsemen. By the fire which the horses spit out
and by their tails which are like serpents, one-third of mankind is
killed. After the sixth trumpet there are two digressions. (1) The
angel standing on the land and the sea. He swears that at the sound
of the seventh trumpet the mystery will be completed. He hands to the
Seer a little book. When eaten by him it is found sweet to taste, but
bitter when once devoured. Taken from Ezech., ii. 8; iii, 3. (2) The
contamination of the court of the Temple by the heathens. It lasts
three and a half years. Taken from Dan., vii, 25; ix, 27; xii, 7-11.
During that time two witnesses are sent to preach in Jerusalem. They
are the two olive-trees foretold by Zach., iv, 3,11. At the end of
their mission they are slain by the beast. They are raised to life
after three and a half days (= years). The seventh trumpet is now
sounded, the nations are judged and the kingdom of Christ is
established.
(3) THE DIVINE
DRAMA. First Act. Chaps. xii, xiii, xiv. The lamb, the woman, and her
seed; and opposed to them, the dragon, the beast from the sea, and
the beast from the land. The main idea is taken from Gen., iii, 15.
"I will put enmities between thee (the serpent) and the woman,
and thy seed and her seed". The woman is arrayed in heavenly
splendour; a crown of twelve stars on her head, and the sun and the
moon under her feet (cf. Gen. xxxvii, 9, 10). She is in travail. Her
first-born is destined to rule all the nation (Ps., ii, 8, 9). She
herself, and her other seed, are persecuted for three and a half
years by the great dragon who tries to kill them. The great dragon is
Satan (Gen., iii, 1). He is cast out of heaven. With his tail he
drags after him one-third of the stars. Taken from Dan., viii, 10.
The fallen stars are the fallen angels. The beast from the sea is in
great part taken from Daniel's description of the four beasts. It
arises from the sea (Dan., vii, 3); has seven heads marked all over
with blasphemies. It had also ten horns, like the fourth beast of
Daniel (vii, 7); it resembled a leopard, the third beast of Daniel
(vii, 6), it had feet like a bear, the second beast of Daniel (vii,
5); and teeth like a lion, the first beast of Daniel (vii, 4). The
great dragon gives full power unto the beast, whereupon all the world
worship it (viz. those whose names are not contained in the book of
the lamb). The followers of the beast have its mark on their head and
hand. The beast from the land has two horns like a ram. Its power
lies in its art of deceiving by means of tokens and miracles.
Throughout the remainder of the book it is called the false prophet.
Its office is to assist the beast from the sea, and to induce men to
adore its image. The first act of the drama concludes with a promise
of victory over the beast by the lamb of God.
Second Act. Chaps.
xv, xvi. The seven vials. They are the seven plagues preceding the
destruction of the great city, Babylon. They were for the greater
part suggested by the Egyptian plagues. The first vial is poured out
on the earth. Men and beasts are smitten with ulcers (Ex., ix. 9,
10). The second and third vial upon the seas and rivers. They become
blood (Ex., vii, 17-21). The fourth vial upon the sun. It burns men
to death. The fifth vial upon the throne of the beast. It causes
great darkness (Ex., x, 11-29). The sixth vial upon the Euphrates.
Its waters are dried up and form a passage for the kings of the East
(Ex., xiv). The seventh upon the air. Storm and earthquake destroy
Babylon.
Third Act. Chaps.
xvii, xviii. The great harlot. She is seated upon the scarlet beast
with the seven heads and ten horns. She is robed in scarlet and
decked with gold. On her head is written: Mystery, Babylon the great.
The kings of the earth commit fornication with her. But the day of
her visitation has come. She is made a desolate place, the habitation
of unclean animals (Is., xiii, 21, 22). Her fall is lamented by the
rulers and merchants of the earth.
Fourth Act. Chaps.
xix, xx. The victory over the beast and the great dragon. A knight
appears mounted on a white horse. His name is "The word of God".
He defeats the beast and the false prophet. They are cast alive in
the pool of fire. Their defeat is followed by the first resurrection
and the reign of Christ for a thousand years. The martyrs rise to
life and partake with Christ in glory and happiness. During these
thousand years the great dragon is held in chains. At their
completion he is once more set at large to torment the earth. He
deceives the nations Gog and Magog. These two names are taken from
Ezech., chaps. xxviii, xxxix, where however Gog is the king of Magog.
At last he also is cast for all eternity in the pool of fire.
Hereupon the general judgement and the resurrection take place.
Fifth Act. Chaps.
xxi, xxii. The new Jerusalem (cf. Ez., xl-xlviii). God dwells in the
midst of His saints who enjoy complete happiness. The new Jerusalem
is the spouse of the lamb. The names of the Twelve Tribes and the
Twelve Apostles are written on its gates. God and the lamb are the
sanctuary in this new city.
Epilogue. Verses
18-21. The prophecy of the book is soon to be fulfilled. The Seer
warns the reader not to add anything to it or take away from it under
pain of forfeiting his share in the heavenly city.
PURPOSE OF THE
BOOK
From this
cursory perusal of the book, it is evident that the Seer was
influenced by the prophecies of Daniel more than by any other book.
Daniel was written with the object of comforting the Jews under the
cruel persecution of Antiochus Epiphanes. The Seer in the Apocalypse
had a similar purpose. The Christians were fiercely persecuted in the
reign of Domitian. The danger of apostasy was great. False prophets
went about, trying to seduce the people to conform to the heathen
practices and to take part in the Caesar-worship. The Seer urges his
Christians to remain true to their faith and to bear their troubles
with fortitude. He encourages them with the promise of an ample and
speedy reward. He assures them that Christ s triumphant coming is at
hand. Both in the beginning and at the end of his book the Seer is
most emphatic in telling his people that the hour of victory is nigh.
He begins, saying: "Blessed is he that . . . keepeth those
things which are written in it; for the time is at hand" (i, 3).
He closes his visions with the pathetic words: "He that giveth
testimony of these things saith, Surely I come quickly: Amen. Come,
Lord Jesus". With the coming of Christ the woes of the
Christians will be avenged. Their oppressors will be given up to the
judgment and the everlasting torments. The martyrs that have fallen
will be raised to life, that they may share the pleasures of Christ's
kingdom, the millennium. Yet this is but a prelude to the everlasting
beatitude which follows after the general resurrection. It is an
article of faith that Christ will return at the end of time to judge
the living and the dead. But the time of His second advent is
unknown. "But of that day and hour no one knoweth, no, not the
angels of heaven, but the Father alone" (Matt., xxiv, 36). It
would appear, and is so held by many that the Christians of the
Apostolic age expected that Christ would return during their own
lifetime or generation. This seems to be the more obvious meaning of
several passages both in the Epistles and Gospels (cf. John, xxi,
21-23; Thess., iv, 13-18). The Christians of Asia Minor and the Seer
with them, appear to have shared this fallacious expectation. Their
mistaken hope, however, did not affect the soundness of their belief
in the essential part of the dogma. Their views of a millennial
period of corporal happiness were equally erroneous. The Church has
wholly cast aside the doctrine of a millennium previous to the
resurrection. St. Augustine has perhaps more than any one else helped
to free the Church from all crude fancies as regards its pleasures.
He explained the millennium allegorically and applied it to the
Church of Christ on earth. With the foundation of the Church the
millennium began. The first resurrection is the spiritual
resurrection of the soul from sin (De Civ. Dei, Lib. XX). Thus the
number 1,000 is to be taken indefinitely.
STRUCTURE OF
THE BOOK AND ITS LITERARY COMPOSITION
The
subject-matter of the Apocalypse required a threefold division. The
first part comprises the seven exhortatory letters. The leading idea
in the second part is the wisdom of Christ. It is symbolized by the
book with seven seals. In it are written the eternal decrees of God
touching the end of the world, and the final victory of good over
evil. No one except Jesus, the lamb slain for the sins of the world,
is worthy to break the seals and read its contents. The third part
describes the power of Christ over Satan and his kingdom. The lamb
defeats the dragon and the beast. This idea is developed in a drama
of five acts. In five successive scenes we see before us the
struggle, the fall of Babylon the harlot, the victory, and final
beatitude. The third part is not only the most important, but also
the most successful from a literary point of view. The drama of the
lamb contains several beautiful thoughts of lasting value. The lamb,
symbolizing gentleness and purity, conquers the beast, the
personification of lust and cruelty. The harlot signifies idolatry.
The fornication which the rulers and the nations of the earth commit
with her signifies the worship they pay to the images of Caesar and
the tokens of his power. The second part is inferior in literary
beauty. It contains much that is taken from the Old Testament, and it
is full of extravagant imagery. The Seer shows a fanciful taste for
all that is weird and grotesque. He delights in portraying locusts
with hair like that of women and horses with tails like serpents.
There are occasional passages revealing a sense of literary beauty.
God removes the curtain of the firmament as a scribe rolls up his
scrolls. The stars fall from the heavens like figs from the fig-tree
shaken by the storm (vi, 12-14). On the whole, however the Seer shows
more love for Oriental splendour than the appreciation of true
beauty.
INTERPRETATION
It would be
alike wearisome and useless to enumerate even the more prominent
applications made of the Apocalypse. Racial hatred and religious
rancour have at all times found in its vision much suitable and
gratifying matter. Such persons as Mahomet, the Pope, Napoleon, etc.,
have in turn been identified with the beast and the harlot. To the
"reformers" particularly the Apocalypse was an
inexhaustible quarry where to dig for invectives that they might hurl
then against the Roman hierarchy. The seven hills of Rome, the
scarlet robes of the cardinals, and the unfortunate abuses of the
papal court made the application easy and tempting. Owing to the
patient and strenuous research of scholars, the interpretation of the
Apocalypse has been transferred to a field free from the odium
theologicum. But then the meaning of the Seer is determined by the
rules of common exegesis. Apart from the resurrection, the
millennium, and the plagues preceding the final consummation, they
see in his visions references to the leading events of his time.
Their method of interpretation may be called historic as compared
with the theological and political application of former ages. The
key to the mysteries of the book they find in chap. xvii, 8-14. For
thus says the Seer: "Let here the mind that hath understanding
give heed".
The beast from the
sea that had received plenitude of power from the dragon, or Satan,
is the Roman Empire, or rather, Caesar, its supreme representative.
The token of the beast with which its servants are marked is the
image of the emperor on the coins of the realm. This seems to be the
obvious meaning of the passage, that all business transactions, all
buying and selling were impossible to them that had not the mark of
the beast (Ap., xiii. 17). Against this interpretation it is objected
that the Jews at the time of Christ had no scruple in handling money
on which the image of Caesar was stamped (Matt., xxii 15-22). But it
should be borne in mind that the horror of the Jews for the imperial
images was principally due to the policy of Caligula. He confiscated
several of their synagogues, changing them into heathen temples by
placing his statue in them. He even sought to erect an image of
himself in the Temple of Jerusalem (Jos., Ant., XVIII, viii, 2). The
seven heads of the beast are seven emperors. Five of them the Seer
says are fallen. They are Augustus Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, and
Nero. The year of Nero's death is A.D. 68. The Seer goes on to say
"One is", namely Vespasian, A.D. 70-79. He is the sixth
emperor. The seventh, we are told by the Seer, "is not yet come.
But when he comes his reign will be short". Titus is meant, who
reigned but two years (79-81). The eighth emperor is Domitian
(81-96). Of him the Seer has something very peculiar to say. He is
identified with the beast. He is described as the one that "was
and is not and shall come up out of the bottomless pit" (xvii,
8). In verse 11 it is added: "And the beast which was and is
not: the same also is the eighth, and is of the seven, and goeth into
destruction". All this sounds like oracular language. But the
clue to its solution is furnished by a popular belief largely spread
at the time. The death of Nero had been witnessed by few. Chiefly in
the East a notion had taken hold of the mind of the people that Nero
was still alive. Gentiles, Jews, and Christians were under the
illusion that he was hiding himself, and as was commonly thought, he
had gone over to the Parthians, the most troublesome foes of the
empire. From there they expected him to return at the head of a
mighty army to avenge himself on his enemies. The existence of this
fanciful belief is a well-attested historic fact. Tacitus speaks of
it: "Achaia atque Asia falso exterrit velut Nero adventaret,
vario super ejus exitu rumore eoque pluribus vivere eum fingentibus
credentibusque" (Hist., II, 8). So also Dio Chrysostomus: και
νύν (kai nyn) (about A.D. 100) έτι πάντες
έπιθυμούσι ζήν
οι όέ πλείστοι
και οίονται
(eti pantes epithymousi zen oi de pleistoi kai oiontai) (Orat., 21,
10; cf. Suet., "Vit. Caes." s.v. Nero, 57, and the
Sibylline Oracles, V, 28-33). Thus the contemporaries of the Seer
believed Nero to be alive and expected his return. The Seer either
shared their belief or utilized it for his own purpose. Nero had made
a name for himself by his cruelty and licentiousness. The Christians
in particular had reason to dread him. Under him the first
persecution took place. The second occurred under Domitian. But
unlike the previous one, it was not confined to Italy, but spread
throughout the provinces. Many Christians were put to death, many
were banished (Eusebius, Hist. Eccl., III, 17-19). In this way the
Seer was led to regard Domitian as a second Nero, "Nero
redivivus". Hence he described him as "the one that was,
that is not, and that is to return". Hence also he counts him as
the eighth and at the same time makes him one of the preceding seven,
viz. the fifth, Nero. The identification of the two emperors
suggested itself all the more readily since even pagan authors called
Domitian a second Nero (calvus Nero, Juvenal. IV, 38). The popular
belief concerning Nero's death and return seems to be referred to
also in the passage (xiii, 3): "And I saw one of its heads as it
were slain to death: and its death's wound was healed". The ten
horns are commonly explained as the vassal rulers under the supremacy
of Rome. They are described as kings (βασιλείς,
basileis), here to be taken in a wider sense, that they are not real
kings, but received power to rule with the beast. Their power,
moreover, is but for "one hour", signifying its short
duration and instability (xvii, 17). The Seer has marked the beast
with the number 666. His purpose was that by this number people may
know it. "He that has understanding, let him count the number of
the beast. For it is the number of a man: and his number is six
hundred and sixty-six". A human number, i.e. intelligible by the
common rules of investigation. We have here an instance of Jewish
gematria. Its object is to conceal a name by substituting for it a
cipher of equal numerical value to the letters composing it. For a
long time interpreters tried to decipher the number 666 by means of
the Greek alphabet, e.g. Irenæus, "Adv. Haer.", V,
33. Their efforts have yielded no satisfactory result. Better success
has been obtained by using the Hebrew alphabet. Many scholars have
come to the conclusion that Nero is meant. For when the name "Nero
Caesar" is spelled with Hebrew letters (נרון
קסר),
it yields the cipher 666.
The second beast,
that from the land, the pseudo-prophet, whose office was to assist
the beast from the sea, probably signifies the work of seduction
carried on by apostate Christians. They endeavoured to make their
fellow Christians adopt the heathen practices and submit themselves
to the cultus of the Caesar. They are not unlikely the Nicolaitans of
the seven Epistles. For they are there compared to Balaam and Jezabel
seducing the Israelites to idolatry and fornication. The woman in
travail is a personification of the synagogue or the church. Her
first-born is Christ, her other seed is the community of the
faithful. --In this interpretation, of which we have given a summary,
there are two difficulties: (I) In the enumeration of he emperors
three are passed over, viz. Galba, Otho, and Vitellius. But this
omission may be explained by the shortness of their reigns. Each one
of the three reigned but a few months. -- (II) Tradition assigns the
Apocalypse to the reign of Domitian. But according to the computation
given above, the Seer himself assigns his work to the reign of
Vespasian. For if this computation be correct, Vespasian is the
emperor whom he designates as "the one that is". To this
objection, however, it may be answered that it was the custom of
apocalyptic writers, e.g., of Daniel, Enoch, and the Sibylline books,
to cast their visions into the form of prophecies and give them the
appearance of being the work of an earlier date. No literary fraud
was thereby intended. It was merely a peculiar style of writing
adopted as suiting their subject. The Seer of the Apocalypse follows
this practice. Though actually banished to Patmos in the reign of
Domitian, after the destruction of Jerusalem, he wrote as if he had
been there and seen his visions in the reign of Vespasian when the
temple perhaps yet existed. Cf. II, 1, 2.
We cannot conclude
without mentioning the theory advanced by the German scholar Vischer.
He holds the Apocalypse to have been originally a purely Jewish
composition, and to have been changed into a Christian work by the
insertion of those sections that deal with Christian subjects. From a
doctrinal point of view, we think, it cannot be objected to. There
are other instances where inspired writers have availed themselves of
non-canonical literature. Intrinsically considered it is not
improbable. The Apocalypse abounds in passages which bear no specific
Christian character but, on the contrary, show a decidedly Jewish
complexion. Yet on the whole the theory is but a conjecture. (See
also APOCRYPHA)
SIMCOX, The
Revelation of St. John (Cambridge, 1893); CALMES, Commentaire (Paris,
1906); SEMERIA, Il Primo Sangue Cristiano (Rome, 1901); HOLTZMANN,
Hand Commentar (Leipzig, 1893); MOMMSEN, Provinces of the Roman
Empire (London, 1886); SALMON, Introduction to the New Testament
(London, 1897); CORLUY in Vig., Dict. de la Bible.
C. VAN DEN
BIESEN
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