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RENEWED CONSOLATORY VISION.
Re 10 AT the point now reached by us the regular progress of the Trumpet
judgments is interrupted, in precisely the same manner as between
the
sixth and seventh Seals, by two consolatory visions. The first is
contained in chap. 10., the second in Re 11:1-13. At Re
11:14 the series of the Trumpets is resumed, reaching from that
point to the end of the chapter.
{Re 10:1-11} Many questions of deep interest, and upon which the
most divergent opinions have been entertained, meet us in connection
with this passage. To attempt to discuss these various opinions
would
only confuse the reader. It will be enough to allude to them when it
seems necessary to do so. In the meantime, before endeavouring to
discover the meaning of the vision, three observations may be made;
one of a general kind, the other two bearing upon the interpretation
of particular clauses. 1. Like almost all else in the Revelation of St. John, the
vision is founded upon a passage of the Old Testament. "And when I
looked," says the prophet Ezekiel, "behold, a hand was Sent unto
me; and, lo, a roll of a book was therein Moreover He said
unto me, Son Of man, eat what thou findest; eat this roll, and go
speak unto the house of Israel. So I opened my mouth, and He caused
me to eat that roll. And He said unto me, Son of man, cause thy
belly
to eat, and fill thy bowels with this roll that I give thee. Then
did
I eat it; and it was in my mouth as honey for sweetness. And He said
unto me, Son of man, go, get thee unto the house of Israel, and
speak
with My words unto them." {Eze 2:9 3:4} 2. In one expression of ver. 6 it is doubtful whether the
translation of the Authorised and Revised Versions, or the marginal
translation of the latter, ought to be adopted, whether we ought to
read, "There shall be time" or "There shall be delay" no longer.
But the former is not only the natural meaning of the original; it
would almost seem, from the use of the same word in other passages
of
the Apocalypse, that it is employed by St. John to designate the
whole Christian age. That age is now at its very close. The last
hour
is about to strike. The drama of the world’s history is about to be
wound up. "For the Lord will execute His word upon the earth,
finishing it and cutting it short." 3. The last verse of the chapter deserves our attention for a
moment: "And they say unto me, Thou must prophesy again over many
peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings." Although prophecy
itself is spoken of in several passages of this book, we read only
once again of prophesying: when it is said in Re 11:3 of the two
witnesses that they shall prophesy. A comparison of these passages
will show that both words are to be understood in the sense of
proclaiming the righteous acts and judgments of the Almighty. The
prophet of the Apocalypse is not the messenger of mercy only, but of
the just government of God. From these subordinate points we hasten to questions more
immediately
concerning us in our effort to understand the chapter. Several such
questions have to be asked. 1. Who is the angel introduced to us in the first verse of
the vision? He is described as "another strong angel"; and, as the
epithet "strong" has been so used only once before—in Re 5:2,
in connection with the opening of the book-roll sealed with seven
seals—we are entitled to conclude that this angel is said to be
"another" in comparison with the angel there spoken of rather than
with the many angels that surround the throne of God. But the
"strong angel" in chap. 5. is distinguished both from God Himself,
and from the Lamb. In some sense, therefore, a similar distinction
must be drawn here. On the other hand, the particulars mentioned of
this angel lead directly to the conclusion not only that he has
Divine attributes, but that he represents no other than that Son of
man beheld by St. John in the first vision of his book. He is
"arrayed with a cloud"; and in every passage of the Apocalypse
where mention is made of such investiture, or in which a cloud or
clouds are associated with a person, it is with the Saviour of the
world as He comes to judgment. Similar language marks also the other
books of the New Testament. "The rainbow was upon his head"; and
the definite article employed takes us back, not to the rainbow
spoken of in the book of Genesis, or to the rainbow which from time
to time appears, a well-known object, in the sky, but to that of
Re 4:3, where we have been told, in the description of the
Divine throne, that "there was a rainbow round about the throne,
like an emerald to look upon." The words "his face was as the sun"
do not of themselves prove that the reference is to Re 1:16,
where it is said of the One like unto a son of man that "His
countenance was as the sun shineth in his strength"; but the
propriety of this reference is made almost indubitable by the
mention
of "his feet as pillars of fire," for this last circumstance can
only be an allusion to the trait spoken of in 2 Re 1:15, "And His feet like unto fine brass, as if
it had been refined in a furnace." The combination of these
particulars shows how close is the connection between the "strong
angel" of this vision and the Divine Redeemer; and the explanation
of both the difference and the correspondence between the two is to
be found in the remark previously made that in the Apocalypse the
"angel" of any person or thing expresses that person or thing in
action. Here, therefore, we have the action of Him who is the Head,
and King, and Lord of His Church. 3. In what character does the Lord appear? As to the answer
to this question there can be no dubiety. He appears in judgment.
The
rainbow upon His head is indeed the symbol of mercy, but it is
sufficiently accounted for by the fact that He is Saviour as well as
Judge. So far is the Apocalypse from representing the ideas of
judgment and mercy as incompatible with each other that throughout
the whole book the most terrible characteristic of the former is its
proceeding from One distinguished by the latter. If even in itself
the Divine wrath is to be dreaded by the sinner, the dread which it
ought to inspire reaches its highest point when we think of it as
"the wrath of the Lamb." The other features of the description
speak directly of judgment: the "cloud," the "sun," the "pillars
of fire." 1. What notion are we to form of the contents of the "little
book-roll"? They are certainly not the same as those of the
book-roll of chap. 5., although the word here used for the roll, a
diminutive from the other, may suggest the idea that there is an
intimate connection between the two books, and that the second, like
the first, is full of judgment. Other circumstances mentioned lead
to
the same conclusion. Thus the "great voice, as a lion roareth,"
cannot fail to remind us of the voice of "the Lion that is of the
tribe of Judah" in chap. 5. The thought of "the seven thunders"
which "uttered their voices" deepens the impression, for in that
number we have the general conception of thunder in all the varied
terrors that belong to it; and, whatever the particulars uttered by
the thunders were—a point into which it is vain to inquire, as the
writing of them was forbidden—their general tone must have been that
of judgment. But these thunders are a response to the strong angel
as
he was about to take action with the little book, -"when he cried,
the seven thunders uttered their voices,"—and the-response must
have been related to the action. It is clear, therefore, that the
contents of the little book cannot have been tidings of mercy to a
sinful world; and that that book cannot have been intended to tell
the Seer that, notwithstanding the opposition of the powers
of darkness, the Church of Christ was to make her way among the
nations, growing up from the small seed into the stately tree, and
at
last covering the earth with the shadow of her branches. Even on the
supposition that a conception of this kind could be traced in other
parts of the Apocalypse, it would be out of keeping with the
particulars accompanying it here. We may Without hesitation conclude
that the little book-roll has thus the general character of
judgment,
although, like the larger roll of chap. 5., it may also include in
it
the preservation of the saints. We are thus in a position to inquire what the special contents of
the
little book-roll were. Before doing so one consideration may be kept
in view. Calling to mind the symmetrical structure of the Apocalypse, it
seems
natural to expect that the relation to one another of the two
consolatory visions falling between the Trumpets and the Bowls will
correspond to that of the two between the Seals and the Trumpets.
The
two companies, however, spoken of in these two latter visions, are
the same, the hundred and forty and four thousand "out of every
tribe of the children of Israel" being identical with the great
multitude "out of every nation"; while the contents of the second
vision are substantially the same as those of the first, though
repeated on a fuller and more perfect scale. Now we shall shortly
see
that the second of our present consolatory visions—that in chap.
11.—brings out the victory and triumph of "a faithful remnant" of
believers within a degenerate, though professing, Church. How
probable does it become that the first consolatory vision—that in
chap. 10.—will relate to the same remnant, though on a lower plane
alike of battle and of conquest! Thus looked at, we have good ground for the supposition that the
little book-roll contained indications of judgment about to descend
on a Church which had fallen from her high position and practically
disowned her Divine Master; while at the same time it assured the
faithful remnant within her that they would be preserved, and in due
season glorified. The little book thus spoke of the hardest of all
the struggles through which believers have to pass: that with foes
of
their own household; but, so speaking, it told also of judgment upon
these foes, and of a glorious issue for the true members of Christ’s
Body out of toil and suffering. With this view of the contents of the little book-roll everything
that is said of it appears to be in harmony. 1. We thus at once understand why it is named by a diminutive
form of the word used for the book-roll in chap. 5. The latter
contained the whole counsel of God for the execution of His plans
both in the world and in the Church. The former has reference to the
Church alone. A smaller roll therefore would naturally be sufficient
for its tidings. 2. The action which the Seer is commanded to, take with the roll
receives adequate explanation. He was to "take it" out of the hand
of the strong angel and to "eat it up." The meaning is obvious, and
is admitted by all interpreters. The Seer is in his own actual
experience to assimilate the contents of the roll in order that he
may know their value. The injunction is in beautiful accord with
what
We otherwise know of the character and feelings of St. John. The
power of Christian experience to throw light upon Christian truth
and
upon the fortunes of Christ’s people is one of the most remarkable
characteristics of the fourth Gospel. It penetrates and pervades the
whole. We listen to the expression of the Evangelist’s own feelings
as he is about to present to the world the image of his beloved
Master, and he cries, "We beheld His glory, glory as of the
only-begotten from the Father; Of His fulness we all
received, and grace for grace." {Joh 1:14,16} We notice his
comment upon words of Jesus dark to his fellow-Apostles and himself
at the time when they were spoken, and he says, "When therefore He
was raised from the dead, His disciples remembered that He spake
this; and they believed the word which Jesus had said." {Joh
2:22} Finally, we hear him as he remembers the promise of the Spirit
of truth, who was to instruct the disciples, not by new revelations
of the Divine will, but by unfolding more largely the fulness that
was to be found in Christ: "Howbeit when He, the Spirit of truth, is
come, He shall guide you into all the truth: for He shall not speak
from Himself; but what things soever He shall hear, these shall He
speak: and He shall declare unto you the things that are to come. He
shall glorify Me: for He shall take of Mine, and shall declare it
unto you.": {Joh 16:13,14} Everywhere and always Christian
experience is the key that unlocks what would otherwise be closed,
and sheds light upon what would otherwise be dark. To such
experience, accordingly, the contents of the little roll, if they
were such as we have understood them to be, must have appealed with
peculiar power. In beholding judgment executed on the world, the
believer might need only to stand by and wonder, as Moses and Israel
stood upon the shore of the Red Sea when the sea, returning to its
bed, overwhelmed their enemies. They were safe. They had neither
part
nor lot with those who were sinking as lead in the mighty waters. It
would be otherwise when judgment came upon the Church. Of that
Church
believers were a part. How could they explain the change that had
come over her, the purification that she needed, the separation that
must take place within what had hitherto been to all appearance the
one Zion which God loved? In the former case all was outward; in the
latter all is inward, personal, experimental, leading to inquiry and
earnest searchings of heart and prayer. A book containing these
things was thus an appeal to Christian experience, and St. John
might
well be told to "eat it up." 3. The effect produced upon the Seer by eating the little roll is
also in accord with what has been said. "It shall make thy belly
bitter," it was said to him, "but in thy mouth it shall be sweet as
honey"; and the effect followed. "It was in my mouth," he says,
"sweet as honey: and when I had eaten it’, my belly was made
bitter." Such an effect could hardly follow the mere proclamation of
judgment on the world. When we look at that judgment in the light in
which it ought to be regarded, and in which we have hitherto
regarded
it—as the vindication of righteousness and of a Divine and righteous
order—the thought of it can impart nothing but joy. But to think
that the Church of the living God, the bride of Christ, shall be
visited with judgment, and to be compelled to acknowledge that the
judgment is deserved; to think that those to whom so much has been
given should have given so little in return; to think of the
selfishness which has prevailed where love ought to have reigned, of
worldliness where there ought to have been heavenliness of mind, and
of discord where there ought to have been unity—these are the things
that make the Christian’s reflections "bitter"; they, and they most
of all, are his perplexity, his burden, his sorrow, and his cross.
The world may disappoint him, but from it he expected little. When
the Church disappoints him, the "foundations are overturned," and
the honey of life is changed into gall and wormwood.
Combining the particulars which have now been noticed, we seem
entitled to conclude that the little book-roll of this chapter is a
roll of judgment, but of judgment relating less to the world than to
the Church. It tells us that that sad experience of hers which is to
meet us in the following chapters ought neither to perplex nor
overwhelm us. The experience may be strange, very different from
what we might have expected and hoped for; but the thread by which
the Church is guided has not passed out of the hands of Him who
leads His people by ways that they know not into the hands of an unsympathising and hostile power. As His counsels in reference to
the world, and to the Church in her general relation to it,
contained
in the great book-roll of chap. 5., shall stand, so the internal
relations of the two parts of His Church to each other, together
with
the issues depending upon them, are equally under His control. If
judgment falls upon the Church, it is not because God has forgotten
to be gracious, or has in anger shut up His tender mercies, but
because the Church has sinned, because she is in need of
chastisement, and because she must be taught that only in direct
dependence upon the voice of the Good Shepherd, and not in the
closest "fold" that can be built for her, is she safe. Let her
"know" Him, and she shall be known of Him even as He is known of
the Father. {Comp. Joh 10:1-15} |