Chapter 8
There are three paragraphs in this chapter. First of
all there is the transition from the seals to the trumpets, verses 1-2.
Secondly, there is that tremendous sense of destiny on the part of the
Tribulational martyrs: the answer to the imprecatory prayers, verses 3-6.
Finally, the chapter closes out with the four trumpet judgements, verses 7-13.
We begin, then, with the transition from the seals
of the Doomsday book to the trumpet judgements of the Doomsday book, verses 1
and 2 of our chapter. We note in verse 1 the opening of the seventh seal which
will contain the seven trumpets. This is a very unusual thing because silence
is not the way in which most of the drama and disasters of the Tribulation is
expressed. It is generally expressed through noise of one kind or another. But
so great are the trumpet judgements and so fantastic their implications with
regard to personal or national sense of destiny that when the seventh seal is
opened by our Lord Jesus Christ there is great silence in heaven. Silence
always has a dual connotation. Silence first of all connotes great respect for
someone who is not present but in your memory. Secondly, silence denotes shock.
Both connotations are found in this verse.
The seventh seal is the amplification of the various
historical trends of the Tribulation, including Satan, demon invasion,
dictatorship and the evil function of religion. Out of the seventh seal there
are two categories of historical trends yet to be studied: the trumpet
judgements of Revelations chapters 8-14 and the drinking goblet judgements of
chapters 15:7 to chapter 18.
The silence here is a reference to the shock of the
supernatural nature of the trumpet judgements. This one half-hour of silence
has to be classified, therefore, as dramatic silence. Up to this point we have
noted a tremendous amount of noise in heaven. This half hour changes
everything, it is classified by silence. The trumpet judgements are
supernatural in character, they are the result of bad decisions, but they have
gone beyond bad decisions to a locked-in system of supernatural judgements
which bring into conflict the two historical conflicts of history. First of all
there is the angelic conflict which existed from before man was created. Then
the angelic conflict has now overflowed into human history and the two are
brought together for the first time in detail in the Tribulation.
There has always been demonism and demon activity.
There has always been supernatural activity on the part of Satan as the ruler
of this world, but primarily he administers his rulership through cosmic one
with its 26 gates of interlocking systems of arrogance, and cosmic two with its
nine gates of interlocking systems of hatred. Cosmic one is grieving the Holy
Spirit in this dispensation; involvement in cosmic two is quenching the Holy
Spirit. This is the way that he operates primarily, he does not have to resort
to supernatural activity because of the arrogance of those in the cosmic
system. The arrogance produces an evil greater even in many ways than
supernatural evil. Nevertheless, in every dispensation there is a certain
amount of demon activity but nothing compared to the Tribulation, and for the
first time in the Tribulation the armies of heaven will be released against the
armies of Satan and there will be angelic fighting in the first heaven [the
atmosphere] and on the surface of the earth, along with all of these
supernatural judgements against man. It is this that brings about this
tremendous silence, the silence of awe, the silence of shock, the silence of
respect, the silence where you have nothing now to say. Everyone in heaven is
going to be absolutely silent at the awe of these trumpet judgements. They are
so great that all are shocked into silence. In fact there would be nothing that
could be added to what our Lord is doing. It is fair, it is just, and the
silence recognises the fact that the human race without the restraint of God
the Holy Spirit in the Tribulation has finally brought itself into a disaster
situation of its own making by its own decisions, and therefore the shock of
what the human race has done to destroy itself and to bring about these
supernatural judgements is almost beyond comprehension. Therefore, silence. So
terrifying are all of these judgements that all heaven is silent.
There is also here the silence of worship. Here is a
side of the Lord that has been obvious from some types of discipline — His
integrity, His holiness, His righteousness — but never has it been seen in such
concentration. The silence of shock therefore becomes the silence of worship,
as illustrated by certain passages where all worship is related to silence on
the part of the congregation, Habakkuk 2:20; Zechariah 2:13. This silence also
connotes a recognition of God’s authority, as found in 1 Timothy 2:11,12.
Two things are absolutely necessary for learning.
One is silence, concentration on what whoever is teaching says, and the other
is submissiveness which is genuine humility. To remain in silence has the
connotation of learning and all heaven is going to learn something new about
God that has never been revealed before. In a short period of seven years there
will be a concentrated system of judgment such as the world has never known. So
this silence in heaven is not only a learning process it is a function of
worship. It is also a manifestation of subordination to the authority of God
and the tremendous happiness in heaven as a result. So this is both learning
silence and application silence. All heaven is silent for learning; all heaven
is silent for making application at this point in the Tribulation when the
trumpet judgements are administered. Lamentations 3:28 gives us another concept
of it: “Let him sit alone and be silent” is applied to these who are under
pressure in the context. Lamentations 3:26, “It is good that he wait silently
for the deliverance of the Lord.” So silence not only indicates worship,
respect and honour to the Lord but it indicates the fantastic function of the
faith-rest drill.
“Then when he had opened the seventh seal, there was
silence in heaven for about half an hour.”
Note the contrast of the seals and sealing. In
Revelation 7:3 we have the sealing for blessing of 144,000 evangelists of the
Tribulation. This sealing is designed for the blessing of mankind through the
presentation of the gospel. Now, by way of contrast, in Revelation 8:1 we have
the breaking of a seal of judgment from which comes the seven trumpet
judgements. Hence, a seal of cursing in. In Revelation seven 144,000 men were
sealed to become evangelists, a seal of blessing; these are seals of cursing
and judgment. There is a principle here and the relationship between Revelation
chapter seven and chapter eight brings out this particular concept: grace
precedes judgment. God provides the seal of blessing before He provides the
seal of cursing.
As we get into the various trumpet judgements we are
going to note that they are supernatural in character; they are not normal
things that happen. Our Lord not only created the universe but He sustains it,
and in sustaining the universe, therefore, He eliminates a lot of supernatural
and extra natural phenomena that would be destructive. The continuation of the
universe and its creatures depends, therefore, on who and what Jesus Christ is.
The omnipotence of Christ is the means of handling these things. The
immutability of Christ is also involved. He is the secret, therefore, to
scientific law. There is no such thing really as a scientific law. There is
scientific phenomena but scientific phenomena simply do not exist; these are
divine laws rather than scientific. Scientific laws are simply the
manifestation of God’s faithfulness. These divine laws — rather than scientific
— simply say science has no way of enforcing these laws. Science cannot
guarantee that they will continue from day to day and operate in exactly the
same way. It is the faithfulness of God that provides this. So-called
scientific laws are based upon the statistical assumption that the universe
which operates according to a fixed norm will continue to do so, yet science
can observe but science cannot guarantee any law. In the meantime, so-called
scientific laws are often set aside — in the Tribulation only — and
supernatural judgements result. Known scientific laws depend entirely, then, on
the faithfulness of God which is omnipotence plus immutability plus the
veracity of our Lord Jesus Christ. Every text and every discovery of the
pattern of the universe is therefore a treatise on the faithfulness of our Lord
Jesus Christ. By the Word of His power Jesus Christ holds the universe
together, Hebrews 1:3. The reason for doing so is to resolve the angelic
conflict in human history and “bring many sons into glory,” as per Hebrews
2:10.
To allow grace to run its full course our Lord Jesus
Christ is holding the universe together. The laws of the universe belong to
God, they demonstrate His faithfulness, His perfect character, His integrity.
These laws can be changed or overruled by the sovereignty of God. Therefore
scientific laws are simply a dissertation on the faithfulness, the integrity of
our Lord Jesus Christ in holding the universe together, and at the same time
holding back eternity so that the human race will have the opportunity to
appropriate salvation and enter into an eternal relationship with Him.
Verse 2, the seven trumpets originate from the
seventh seal, says this verse. The sequential use of the conjunction kai is translated “then.” Next comes the aorist active
indicative of the verb o(raw, which means to see, “Then
I saw.” The constative aorist contemplates the action of the verb in its
entirety. It is a reference to the trumpet judgements and their relationship to
the imprecatory prayers of the Tribulational martyrs. The active voice: the
apostle John produces the action of the verb. The indicative mood is
declarative for the reality of the trumpet judgements.
With this we have an object of the verb. The
accusative plural direct object is formed from three Greek words. First of all
the definite article touj, the generic use of the
definite article, it defines a category. The indeclinable numeral e(pta for “seven,” and then finally the noun a)ggeloj, “Then I saw the seven angels.” These seven angels
are pur sui vant messengers in the
college of heralds.
The doctrine of the angelic college of heralds
1. The Commander-in-Chief, the “Angel of the Lord,”
a reference to the ruler of the college of heralds, the Lord Jesus Christ. This
is a theophany. The elect angels are always under the command of Christ and
this would imply that the elect angels had a similar salvation to what we have
today. It is related, at least, to the second person of the Trinity.
2. The seraphim heralds. The seraph is distinguished
from all other angels as the highest-ranking because of his six wings, Isaiah
6:2. Angels do not have wings, with two exceptions: seraphs and cherubs. Wings
are simply an insignia of rank. There are two categories of seraphs. There are
the four angelic heralds and there is the king of arms. The king of arms is the
highest, the “powerful angel” of Revelation 5:2.
3. The cherubim heralds, pur sui vant officers. The cherub has four wings. There are six
categories of cherubs:
a. The cherubs who guard the gate of the Garden of
Eden, Genesis 3:24.
b. The four cherubs, one at each wheel of the
chariot of fire, Ezekiel chapters 1 and 10.
c. Lucifer the son of the morning, Ezekiel 28:14,
who now bears the title Satan or devil and is the ruler of this world.
d. The pur sui
vant officer who commands the weather machine, Revelation 7:2.
e. The angel with the golden incense shovel,
Revelation 8:3.
f. The administrator of historical disaster, 2
Samuel 22:11; Psalm 18:10.
4. The wingless messengers of judgment, pur sui vant messengers. They include
seven categories:
a. The angelic messengers who spent the night with
Lot in Sodom, Genesis 19:13ff.
b. The destroying angel of 2 Samuel 24:16.
c. The destroying angels of Psalm 78:49.
d. The executioners of the city of Jerusalem,
Ezekiel 9:1ff.
e. The man clothed in Linen who acts as the
messenger of the chariot of fire, Ezekiel 10:6.
f. The four
angels each having a hemisphere who restrained the wind cells of the weather
machine — Revelation 7:1.
g. The angels with the seven trumpets, Revelation
8:6. (Also there are seven angels bearing the wine goblets of the wrath of God)
Moving on with the exegesis of verse two we have the
nominative plural relative pronoun o(j, translated “who.” Then the
perfect active indicative of the verb i(stemi which means to stand, “who stand,” the perfect tense of existing state
in which the past is dropped from the thought and attention is focused on the
status quo. It is like the intensive perfect, it is translated usually with the
English present tense. The active voice: seven pur sui vant angels produce the action of the verb. The indicative
mood is for a simple statement of fact. Then the improper preposition e)nwpion, and with it its object qeoj
in the genitive, “before God.” “Then I saw the seven angels who stand before
God.” There is a definite article in the Greek but it is not translated because
it is generic. So here are the seven pur
sui vant messengers, they are now on red alert before the throne of God for
the purpose of administering the unique judgements, four of which are found in
this chapter. These four are against nature and they are supernatural in
character.
Added to this are the seven trumpets which are given
to them, “and seven trumpets were given,” the aorist passive indicative of the
verb didomi which means to give. Notice
that in each of the three sequences of judgements that something is used that
is familiar in the ancient world. We have studied the seal judgements which are
in the Doomsday book and noted their significance. Now we go to trumpets, a
musical instrument but not a musical instrument in the ancient world. The
trumpet was used rather as a system for giving commands. It was an alert
system, an alert for something unusual which we have anticipated by the silence
in heaven for half an hour. Verbal commands were often impossible, they did not
have systems of communication such as we have today whereby voice commands
could be given to thousands of troops. Then we are going to look at next the
vial judgements which are really not vials at all but drinking goblets. The
fact that these angels have different categories of instruments which were used
in the ancient world also is significant. So terrible are the trumpet
judgements that the trumpet is used because of the din, the confusion, the
unusual noises of nature and human beings combined in great agony.
The aorist tense of didomi
is the culminative aorist, it views the giving of the trumpets in their
entirety but regards it from the viewpoint of existing results, the answer to
the imprecatory prayers of the Tribulational martyrs. The passive voice: the
seven trumpets receive the action of the verb. That is, they were given to the pur sui vant messengers for the
administration of seven unusual judgements. With this we have a dative plural
indirect object from the intensive pronoun a)utoj
which is generally, but not always, used as the personal pronoun third person.
Here it is used as the personal pronoun in the plural referring to the pur sui vant messengers, “and seven
trumpets were given to them.”
Translation of verse two: “Then I saw the seven
angels [seven pur sui vant messengers
from the angelic college of heralds] who stand before God: and seven trumpets
were given to them.”
To understand these seven trumpets we need to go
back to chapter six, verse 9 and note again the Tribulational martyrs, for it
is these martyrs who are responsible for the seven trumpets. These most unusual
judgements in history, supernatural judgements in fact, are the result of a
category of prayer we call imprecatory.
“And when he
[our Lord Jesus Christ] had broken the fifth seal, I saw under the altar [of
burnt offerings] the souls [lives] of those who had been murdered [butchered].”
While many
of these believers have not been saved very long before their martyrdom they
have advanced to maturity very rapidly and they have made the ultimate
sacrifice. They have given their lives for Bible doctrine, for their faith. In
the meantime they are enjoying great interim happiness in their interim bodies
in heaven, and the fact that they are seen under the altar of burnt sacrifice
emphasises their fantastic virtue. They have given their lives under principles
that they had virtue that could not be destroyed by any form of torture. They
had perception of doctrine that would not crack under the greatest pressures of
life. In short, they had everything that was worthwhile from the Word of God.
Remember that all believers of the world go up at the Rapture and that means no
believers when the Tribulation begins, and remembering the shortness of the
Tribulation, a shortened seven years, you can begin to see the intensity of
living in that period. The longest any believer can live would be a little
short of seven years and in perhaps one or two years these people take in
doctrine in such an intense way that they are able to advance to maturity.
These believers fulfil a principle that is enucleated
in Matthew 16:24,25. Self-denial is usually regarded by people with any lust
for life as a pain in the neck and it certainly doesn’t fit the average
person’s idea of what fun should be. But if you have Bible doctrine, and if you
have strong motivation and therefore from this great entrenched happiness in
the soul, and if you have learned to entertain yourself, which very few people
seem to have done in the time in which we live, you can utilise your time
properly. In other words, you are able to have a disciplined system of time, to
get organised. Unhappy people never get organised and that contributes to their
self-induced misery. This is what Jesus is saying here. He is not saying that
you are going to have to grit your teeth and it is going to be miserable, far
from it. “Let him deny himself” simply means organise yourself. To take up the
cross means to go through life with impersonal love, the highest form of
virtue. It means that no matter how antagonistic people may be toward you, no
matter how much they hate you, no matter how much they make life miserable, you
treat them exactly the same way that you treat everyone, the function of
impersonal love. For that you have to have integrity. Once you get organised
you have a chance to take in Bible doctrine and then you have a chance to
develop integrity. Once you have integrity you are carrying your cross and it
is not miserable at all, it is very happy. “Follow me” means fulfil His plan.
The human security system concept is what we have in
verse 25 of Matthew 16, “Whoever wishes to deliver his soul [life] will lose
it.” That is the person who is not well organised, who has no common sense, who
is divorced from reality and who is a product of his own decisions and dies
miserably, the sin unto death for the believer. But, “whoever loses his life
for my sake shall find it.” In other words, the believer who loses his life for
the sake of the Lord dies under dying grace, he has great happiness in time, he
moves on into the interim life, as will the Tribulational saints. In an
intensified way the Tribulational martyrs advance to maturity, they are well
organised, they learn Bible doctrine, they have great common sense and great
integrity, and they gave their lives refusing to renounce Christ. They died, it
says, because of Bible doctrine, “because of the Word of God [6:9].” The
spiritual growth of positive Tribulational believers: through a concentrated
effort they were organised, they had a sense of personal destiny, they related
their scale of values to number one, Bible doctrine — the Word of God has
always been the greatest opposition to the cosmic system —, they loved the Word
and Satan was permitted to remove them from the earth through martyrdom. But their
death does not stop Bible doctrine. No matter how many believers die Bible
doctrine goes on forever. Bible doctrine is never hindered or slowed down and
there is no way that Satan by the administration of death can destroy them.
Nothing can stop the power of the Word of God.
The second reason for their martyrdom, verse 9, is
“because of the testimony they maintained.” This is their deposition with
regard to the gospel. These positive believers of the future are not only
consistent in the perception of doctrine but they are consistent in the
production of virtue, the function of evangelism, their personal testimony.
These believers are not the evangelists of the Tribulation but they are dynamic
believers living in the Tribulation, and they stand out because the Tribulation
is a time of historical disaster and they have fantastic happiness. They don’t
die with a grim face, they are happy and relaxed, they are organised people and
people with great capacity for life. So the Tribulational martyrs of the future
teach us a great lesson.
In Revelation 6:10 we have again the subject of
imprecatory prayers. We are now going to relate it to our passage for all of
the trumpet judgements are related to the imprecatory prayers which were
uttered by these people, “and they said, ‘How long O sovereign Lord’… ”
Sovereign Lord refers to the integrity of Jesus Christ as God: His
righteousness and His perfect justice. Because God is righteous, because God is
justice, therefore because God is holy, He must do something about the injustices
under which they were martyred. They have the courage and the boldness to speak
up, they have learned a great deal of doctrine, they know when to speak and
when not to, they know that they have a point and they make their point at this
time for our benefit. They also add to the word “holy,” the integrity of Jesus
Christ as God, but they add the word “true” which also means dependable. “How
long O sovereign Lord, holy [the integrity of Christ as God] and true [the
integrity of Christ in His hypostatic union].” This is a double appeal. It is
an appeal to Jesus Christ as God, it is an appeal to Jesus Christ as their
great high priest. They recognise that He has the key to the situation.
The appeal to the hypostatic union in the
imprecatory prayers is compatible with emphasis on the justice of our Lord
Jesus Christ to rectify the terrible injustices done to these believers by a
demon- possessed government and demon-possessed people at that time. While
imprecatory prayers are generally defined as prayers for vengeance it is used
here as an appeal to the justice of God, to the integrity of God, to the
holiness of God. And, of course, the prayers are offered in the same way that
we offer prayers, through our Lord Jesus Christ.
In the past this was a legitimate prayer offered by
great believers such as King David, who said in Psalm 13:1, “How long?” the
same words used by these Tribulational martyrs. And then in verse 2, “How long
will my enemies triumph over me?” He prayed these prayers under great pressure
from his enemies. He said in verse 3, “Look on me and answer, O Lord, my God,”
and added in verse 4, “My enemy will say, ‘I have overcome him,’ and my foes
will rejoice with glee when I fall.” Cf. Psalms 54; 143; 35; 59, imprecatory
prayers.
The seven trumpet judgements are the answer to the
imprecatory prayers of Tribulational believers. Even the martyrs said from
under the altar, “How long before these prayers are answered?” They were prayed
in confidence. So great were these Tribulational believers, so advanced
spiritually, that when they prayed that their persecutors would be ruined and
dealt with by the justice of God they were absolutely confident that their
prayers would be answered. And their confidence is reflected in these seven
trumpet judgements. While these trumpet judgements are horrible don’t feel
sorry for the recipients, they had it coming.
These judgements are divided into two categories.
Four of them are found in chapter eight, the other three are found in other
chapters and they are called “Woes.” The first four judgements are all related
to nature. Supernatural things in nature are brought against mankind. These
four trumpet judgements are presented in verses 7-13 as a part of the answer to
the imprecatory prayers of Tribulational believers. The last three trumpet
judgements are directed against mankind. All of these judgements are going to
combine to make life horrible for those who persecuted believers in the
Tribulation.
The first trumpet is found in Revelation 8:7. It is
a judgment against vegetation where one third of the topsoil, vegetation, rain
forest, is removed from the earth. We will see what happens under those
conditions and how this becomes a fantastic judgment.
The second trumpet is found in 8:8,9. It is a judgment
against salt water.
The third trumpet is found in 8:10,11. It is a judgment
against fresh water.
The fourth trumpet judgment in 8:12 is going to
bring great darkness to the earth and there will be no help for that for a
certain time.
The fifth trumpet judgment is called the first woe,
9:1-12. It is a judgment involving a demon invasion from the Abyss, and where
we meet the number two fallen angel, Abaddon or Apollyon.
The sixth trumpet is found in 9:13-21. It is a demon
invasion from under the Euphrates river.
The seventh trumpet or third woe is found in
11:15-12:17, another woe on demon activity, the demon attack against Israel,
the greatest movement of anti-Semitism in all of human history.
In answer to the imprecatory prayers it is
interesting to note one principle. In the first four trumpets God does some
supernatural things with nature, supernatural because they are very
destructive, but the world survives. These are exceptions to scientific laws.
But in the last three we have demon attacks. And who do the demons attack? They
do not attack believers, they attack unbelievers who are serving Satan. That
could be called “confusion in the ranks” for in answer to imprecatory prayers
God turns the fiercest of demons into attacks upon people. The imprecatory prayers
have tremendous power in their proper setting of the Tribulation for God is
going to answer them by turning Satan’s greatest demon armies on Satan’s
greatest human servants. And Satan can do nothing to stop it. Now you know
where the power is! The power is with God for these three great demon invasions
are going to be against unbelievers and servants of Satan only. Again, it is a
reminder of the power of prayer.
We are
studying the seven trumpet judgements which are in answer to the imprecatory
prayers of Tribulational believers. We will see the first trumpet in verse
seven, a judgment against vegetation. The second judgment in verses eight and
nine is against salt water. Verses ten and eleven: judgment against fresh
water. In verse twelve a very unusual celestial judgment. All of these have to
do with supernatural activities in nature. Then follows in chapter nine two of
the last three of the trumpet judgements and they are called woes. The first
woe is the demon invasion from the Abyss in chapter nine verses one through
twelve. The sixth trumpet is a demon invasion from the Euphrates in chapter
nine verses thirteen through twenty one. The we have to skip over the
Revelation chapter eleven verses fifteen through chapter twelve verse seventeen
for the third woe or the seventh trumpet which is Satan’s famous attack on
Israel, the last and most intensified function of anti-Semitism.
In the paragraph here in verses three through six we
note the answer to the imprecatory prayers of the Tribulational believers.
In verse 3 we begin by noting the conjunction kai, translated “and, followed by the adjective a)lloj which refers to someone different, an angel but a
different one in that category. It is translated “another. With it is the
nominative singular subject a)ggeloj, a pur sui vant officer of cherub rank in the college of heralds. Next
comes the aorist active indicative of the verb e)rxomai, “another angel came.” The constative aorist contemplates the action
of the verb in its entirety. The per sui vant officer produces the action of
the verb in the active voice. The declarative mood is for a simple statement of
fact, but more than that, it demonstrates the fact that these angels have
entered into their status quo of eternity. They fought a good fight in the
prehistoric conflict between the fallen angels and the elect angels. They have
a very definite confidence about them, a confidence that means that while they
were in their struggle, long before man was created, they had a tremendous
sense of destiny. This is one of the higher categories of angels with that
sense of destiny.
Never in the history of the human race has one
dispensation had such a fantastic opportunity under the same concept of sense
of destiny as the Church Age. You and I as believers in the Lord Jesus Christ
are royal family of God. As members of the royal family of God and a kingdom of
priests we should have a very great sense of destiny. Our sense of destiny has
to do first of all with God’s plan. God has given us as the royal family the same
divine dynasphere used by our Lord Jesus Christ in His humanity during the
first advent. He had the prototype; we now have the operational type.
Long before we existed there were those elect angels
who had a very clear sense of their own personal destiny and they related it
properly to whatever form of Bible doctrine was given to them before human
history began. Because they had this and because through every type of disaster
and difficulty they were faithful to the Word of God they now have entered into
their eternity and certain angels, like the one in our verse and other angels,
is a unique person; he is very high among the officers and the nobility among
the elect angels. And so when it says, “And another angel,” that is the story
of a person, a creature quite superior to mankind in its present form, but an
angelic creature who through all of that conflict was faithful to Bible
doctrine.
It pays to have a one-tracked mind until you come to
a point where you must have flexibility through the application of doctrine. To
be single-minded about your scale of values and to be flexible in your
application of doctrine makes a devastating combination. This particular angel
has his own biography which is absolutely fantastic and very helpful to us. No
matter what the historical climate happened to be at any given time in the past
in the angelic conflict before man was created, whether it was historical
adversity or historical prosperity, this is one of those successful above
millions and millions of angels. For many of the elect angels, like many
believers today, had their own status quo carnality, had their own failures,
and did not even fulfil the objectives under the plan of God assigned to them
in their generation of angelic history.
And so it is today. You have a greater
responsibility for what happens in this country and this generation than anyone
else. When things go bad we cannot turn around and say it was the fault of
anyone else.
And it says, regarding the angel, “he took his
place, the aorist passive indicative of the verb i(stemi, and it means that he took his place or he stood or he took a stand.
The ingressive aorist tense contemplates the action of the verb at its
beginning. He is going to be quite active now in heaven. He has the privilege
of being in charge of the administration by which all of the imprecatory
prayers of the believers of the Tribulation will be answered, and will be
answered from the justice of God. The passive voice: the subject, his pur sui vant officer, this cherub
receives the action of the verb. The indicative mood is declarative for a
simple statement of fact and this is said to be “he takes his stand” or “he
takes his place” at the altar. This is e)pi
plus the genitive of a very long word. E)pi
takes the genitive. When it takes the ablative it means something else. When it
takes the accusative it means something else. Here, e)pi
plus the genitive emphasises contact, location. The noun is qusiasthrion, and it refers to a very
special altar, not the brazen altar but the golden altar of incense. It is
first mentioned in Exodus chapter thirty, verses one through ten. It was
associated with the Tabernacle and it was the altar which was associated with
the ark of the covenant in the holy of holies, according to Hebrews 9:4. This
particular altar is constructed of acacia wood and is plated with gold. Hence,
it depicts our Lord Jesus Christ in hypostatic union, eternal God and true
humanity in one person forever. Therefore being in hypostatic union our Lord
Jesus Christ is our high priest. All prayers are processed through Him. And
that is not only true for us but as indicated here it is true for the
Tribulational believers. The gold represents the deity of Christ, the wood His
true humanity. Around the top of the altar was a crown of gold, emphasising our
Lord’s third royal patent, and according to Leviticus 16:18 the altar of
incense was placed just in front of the second veil. The second veil was the
one that separated the holy place from the holy of holies in the tabernacle
and, later on, the temple. This is where the angel stands. This is the heavenly
original from which the tabernacle and the temple was patterned.
With this we have a present active participle from
the verb e)xw, “and he had.” The
retroactive progressive present denotes what was begun in the past but
continues into the present and even into future time. It is rendered into
English by the perfect or past tense. The active voice: the pur sui vant officer, this cherub with
his very high rank in the college of heralds, produces the action. The
circumstantial participle expresses attendant circumstances and therefore is
translated into the English by a conjunction and the finite verb. Even though
it is a participle it is translated this way.
Next we have the accusative singular direct object
composed of two words. First of all the word xrousouj, and it means “made of gold.” With it we have a very controversial
word in the Greek, libanwtoj. This word means several
things. It means frankincense; it means a shovel; it means something in which
frankincense is burned which we might call simply an incense shovel, and that
is the way we will translate it. The controversy comes from what this shovel
was like. This is a golden incense shovel.
Here we have a high-ranking angel and he is carrying
around an incense shovel made of gold. And it goes on to say, “consequently,”
the conjunction kai, something was given to
him. And next we have “much incense was given to him.” The verb to give here
which comes first in the Greek is the aorist passive indicative of the verb didomi, and it is correctly translated “to give.” The
constative aorist contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. The
passive voice: the subject is “much incense” and it receives the action of the
verb. It is passed over to the shovel and to the cherub who holds the shovel.
The indicative mood is declarative for the historical reality of this future
event in heaven.
The subject is now composed of two words. First we
have an adjective poluj, and whatever it is it came
in a large quantity and it took a strong angel to hold it up, and the cherub
apparently had great strength. The incense is called qumiama.
What is this incense that was given to him? And why
is qumiama such an important word? Qumiama, the incense, is made up of four different things.
These four elements are mentioned in Exodus 30.
First of all
there is stacti [Hebrew], which means
to drop or distil and it refers to myrrh. Frankincense and myrrh were used by
the wise men from Persia who came to pay their respects to our Lord Jesus
Christ. Myrrh was used for a perfume but it wasn’t used for a perfume by ladies
to attract men. It was used for embalming. It was an ingredient also used for
anointing oil. It was one of the gifts of the Magi and it was used by them to
anticipate the death of Christ on the cross, bearing the sins of the entire
world. Also it was used to represent strategic victory. This particular myrrh
was used two ways: to embalm the dead and to make an appointment, to anoint,
which means to commission. The death has to do with the cross. When our Lord
Jesus Christ was on the cross the sins of the entire world were imputed to Him
on the cross. He was judged on the cross and that is its connotation in
embalming. That is why it is used in this shovel that the angel has. It was
also used for anointing, and that indicates the strategic victory of Christ in
His death, burial, resurrection, ascension, and receiving His third royal
patent.
The second ingredient was onycha [Hebrew], and according to Exodus 30:34 it was an ingredient
of incense used for the ritual in the tabernacle. It is derived from scale or
shell, the shell, for example, of a shellfish. Onycha also refers to our Lord’s death on the cross. It emphasises
the relationship between propitiation and prayer. When Jesus Christ was hanging
on the cross God the Father judged our sins and, afterward, He was satisfied
[or propitiated] with what had happened. This was why it was used on that
golden altar in front of the holy of holies.
In the holy
of holies was a box called the ark of the covenant. Inside that box were those
things that represent sin. The box was made of acacia wood and gold, speaking
of Christ in hypostatic union. Over the top of that box was a throne which was
called the mercy seat, and on each end of the throne was a golden cherub, in
each case speaking of the holiness of God, composed of His perfect
righteousness and His justice. Once a year, on the day of atonement, the high
priest came in and sprinkled the blood of the sacrifice over the top of the
mercy seat. The righteousness of God looked down and was satisfied because it
represented Christ bearing our sins, and He was perfect as He hung upon the
cross — doctrine of impeccability. The justice of God looked down — the other
half of divine integrity — and was satisfied because our sins had been judged
on the cross. The concept is called propitiation. So when the mercy seat is
brought in to, say, the book of Romans the word for mercy seat is propitiation.
Christ became the propitiation [mercy seat] for us.
This must relate also to prayer. When you believe in
the Lord Jesus Christ you are then commanded to pray. And there are various
mandates about prayer. Since God the Father is propitiated or satisfied with
the work of Christ on the cross, and since when we are in the divine dynasphere
and we offer prayer we offer it through Christ, and God is satisfied with
Christ and His work on the cross. And He is now seated at the right hand of the
Father as the stamp of propitiation. Any prayer that comes through Christ if we
are in the divine dynasphere is going to be answered. That is why onycha was burned as a part of this
incense; that is why it burned in the golden shovel in our context.
Then there is a third ingredient called galbanum [Hebrew]. This is a gum resin
which has a very pungent odour. When mixed with a fragrant substance it has the
effect of increasing and prolonging the sweet odour of the incense. It
emphasises the power of prayer from believers in fellowship, believers who have
a sense of destiny and are executing the plan of God. It emphasises the power
of prevailing prayer from believers in the Tribulation who are under much
persecution.
Finally, number four is frankincense. In Matthew
2:11 frankincense was offered by the Magi to our Lord Jesus Christ. The white
gum is derived from certain trees. It was used by the Magi to portray the impeccability
of Christ inside the prototype divine dynasphere and to emphasise the fact that
prayer can only be answered when believers are in fellowship with God [inside
the divine dynasphere] and offer those prayers through our Lord Jesus Christ.
All prayer must be related to the person of Christ and the filling of the Holy
Spirit.
The documentation for these four ingredients: Exodus
30:34,35.
Translation of verse 3 so far: “Then another angel
came and took his place before the altar, and he had an incense shovel made of
gold; consequently much incense was given to him ...”
Next we have the purpose: the conjunction i(na introduces a sub-final purpose clause. There are
two kinds of purpose clauses, final and sub-final. Here we have a sub-final
purpose clause in which the action of the main verb is directed toward a given
result, which result is anticipated. So it is translated, “in order that.” Then
we have the future active indicative of didomi,
but here it does not mean to give. It has a similar connotation. We translate
this correctly, “in order that he might offer it.” The future tense expresses
the anticipation of a future event, hence a predictive future. The active
voice: this particular angel, one of the highest-ranking in the angelic order
of battle, is actually going to do this thing in heaven. He is going to produce
the action of the verb by making the offering. The indicative mood is
declarative for an unqualified statement of fact as to the subject, as to the
function, and as to its meaning. The word “it” is added, it refers to the
incense, hence the incense indicates the fact that the imprecatory prayers of
Tribulational believers are acceptable to God like the sweet odour of the
incense. God is propitiated by these prayers and therefore they will be
answered.
Then we have what it is being offered with — the
instrumental of manner, plural, from the noun proseuxh. Since the incense is associated with the prayers of the Tribulational
believers we have the instrumental of manner, also the instrumental of
association. With this we have the possessive genitive plural from a(gioj, “saints,” indicating that these prayers come from believers.
We have an adjective in the genitive plural, paj,
“of all the saints.”
Then we have the repetition of that prepositional
phrase “upon the altar.” The word for “altar” is the altar of golden incense.
With this we have an accusative neuter singular definite article, to, but the definite article is used as
a relative pronoun translated “which.” Add the verb to be, e)imi, “which is.”
Then, finally, the prepositional phrase, the
improper preposition from the adverb e)nwpion, plus the noun qronoj, “before the throne.”
Translation of verse three: “Then another angel [a pur sui vant officer, cherub rank in the
college of heralds] came and took his place before the altar, and he had an
incense shovel made of gold; consequently much incense was given to him in
order that he might offer the prayers of all the saints [Tribulational believers]
on the golden altar which was before the throne.”
The doctrine of prayer
Prayer is a weapon and, like any weapon, you have to
know how to use it. How does it function? Prayer is the effective function of
petition and entreaty to God on the part of the believer in Christ who resides
in the divine dynasphere. It is a weapon, it must be treated as a weapon, it
must be understood as a weapon, it must be used as a weapon.
God the Father is the recipient of all prayer; God
the Son is the means of approach. Each member of the Trinity has certain
designated functions according to the Word of God and these functions must be
understood to be effective as a believer. Don’t offer prayer to the Lord Jesus
Christ, don’t offer prayer to God the Holy Spirit. Prayer is offered to God the
Father and Jesus Christ adhered to this rule in His humanity during the period
of the first advent.
God the Father receives prayer from three different
sources: from believers, Hebrews 4:16; God the Son offers prayer in hypostatic
union, Hebrews 7:25; God the Holy Spirit, Roman 8:26, 27.
There is
also a prayer that the believer cannot pray because of the intensity of
pressure, disaster, shock, and that is why the Holy Spirit prays for us with groanings
which cannot be uttered in Romans 8:26,27.
In verse four we are introduced once again for the
third time to the imprecatory prayers of Tribulational saints. The connective
conjunction kai is sequential and
translated “then.” With this we have the nominative singular subject from the
noun kapnoj, translated “smoke.” It is
the smoke of burnt incense. And with it we have the genitive plural from qumiama, “the smoke of the incense.” The plural refers to
the four categories which are involved in that incense and their significance
as related to our Lord’s first advent and His strategic victory at the cross.
Then comes the verb, the aorist active indicative of the verb a)nabainw which means to ascend, to go up, “Then the smoke of
the incense went up.” This is a constative aorist tense contemplating the
action of the verb in its entirety.
These prayers are answered. The dynamics of prayer
in the Tribulation is one of the great spiritual phenomenons of that time. The
active voice: the smoke of the incense produces the action of the verb. The
declarative is the for the historical reality of this future event. There is
here the associative instrumental plural from the noun proseuxh, a Greek word for prayer, and with it the genitive
of a(gioj meaning saints.
Translation: “Then the smoke of the incense, along
with [the associated instrumental] the [imprecatory] prayers of the saints,
went up before God from the hand of the angel.”
Just as the smoke of burning incense is used to
portray propitiation, so it is also used in the Bible for the concept of
answered prayer. The incense indicates that the imprecatory prayers of the
Tribulational believers are being answered by the seven trumpet judgements. And
just as the pur sui vant officer of
cherub rank commanded the four angels, the pur
sui vant messengers who controlled the wind cell. So the pur sui vant cherub commands the seven
angels who will sound the trumpets to administer this judgment. Anticipating
the next verse, the answer to the imprecatory prayers call for great judgements
and great historical disasters on earth, they are, in effect, supernatural
judgements. This brings us back to the chariot of fire which we have noticed in
Ezekiel chapters one and ten.
Verse 5, the function of the pur sui vant officer in the answer to these imprecatory prayers.
Again we have the sequential kai, “then,” and the nominative
singular from the subject, a)ggeloj, and the perfect active
indicative of lambanw. He stood at the altar until
he was given the command, “Then he took.” The perfect tense is a dramatic
perfect, it describes vividly the ease with which one does a thing. When you
are serving the Lord the ease with which things are accomplished is an amazing
thing. He is about to something that is about to turn the world upside down
with supernatural judgements. The dramatic perfect, then, emphasises the
results of the action. The active voice: the pur sui vant officer produces the action. The indicative mood is
declarative for a future statement of fact in the field of eschatology. What is
angel took is the accusative singular direct object from libanwtoj which refers to the golden
shovel. It is translated in the King James version “censer.” It is a golden
shovel in which incense is burned. He took the incense shovel and he filled it
with the fire from the altar. So it has a place for coals on it, it heats up
and begins the process of the incense being manufactured.
And he threw it. We have the aorist active
indicative from ballw which means sometimes to
hurl. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist which views the events in its
entirety but regards it from the viewpoint of existing results, the judgements
of the inhabitants of the earth, unbelievers, in answer to imprecatory prayers
of the Tribulational believers. The active voice: the pur sui vant officer produces this action in heaven. The indicative
mood is declarative for the reality of the act which is tantamount to a command
from the pur sui vant officer, a
command which has been relayed from God Himself, to the pur sui vant messengers who have the
seven trumpets and who are on red alert for sounding off. Then we have a
preposition, “to the earth,” e)ij plus gh. The imprecatory prayers of believers are collected
in heaven and then at the exact moment they are approved, resulting in the
answer, the judgment of the seven trumpets. Such historical judgment generally
originates from the chariot of fire but in this case the judgment originates
from the altar because they involve answers to the imprecatory prayers of the
Tribulational saints, chapter 6:9-10. The answer to question, How long? is
found in the administration of the trumpet judgements. These same Tribulational
martyrs who had offered the imprecatory prayers are described in more detail on
chapter 7:9-17.
Now we have the warning of coming judgements. We
have the predicate nominative bronth which means crashes or
peels of thunder, a warning of the coming storm. Hence, a warning of the coming
trumpet judgements to the people of the earth. This is the principle of grace
before judgment, there is still time for people to repent and avoid these
judgements. No one has ever been judged by God without more than adequate
warning. The problems we bring on ourselves and call divine discipline are
really not divine discipline at all. We are the products of our own decisions
and when we make bad decisions we simply manufacture our own misery. The only
warning we get from that is the function of our own soul, but when God does
judge, and these judgements originate from God, there is always a tremendous
warning system.
The second predicate nominative is fwnh which means voices, sounds or noises. This is the
audible warning system, like a tornado, a hurricane, etc. to give people the
opportunity of changing their mind.
The third is a)straph and it means flashes of lightning. So we have the warning: “and he
hurled it to the earth and there followed peels of thunder, loud noises and flashings
of lightnings.” These are all warnings of coming judgment. The flashings of
lightning would be the visual rather than the audio approach, it indicates the
coming of great historical disaster in the Tribulation.
These first three subjects are connected by the
conjunction kai used in its connective
sense. Then we have kai one more time and it is
used as an adjunctive kai, “also.” But before we get
to that we should have “there followed,” the aorist middle participle of the
verb ginomai, which means to be, to
become, here it means to follow. It is because of this state-of-being verb that
we can actually have predicate nominatives here instead of accusative. The
constative aorist tense of the verb contemplates the action of the verb in its
entirety. These signs or warnings of coming judgment allow people to change
their mind and avoid the judgment. This is a period of grace before judgment to
allow the recipients of the judgment another chance. The middle voice is the
indirect middle emphasising the subject, the warning of judgment as producing
the action of the verb. The participle is circumstantial.
Then comes the adjunctive use of the conjunction kai, and then a word in the singular, seismoj, for earthquake. One of the great and terrible
earthquakes will occur at this point.
Verse 6, the function of the pur sui vant messengers in answer to the imprecatory prayers. God
the Father processed those imprecatory prayers. The Son then put everything
into action. From the Son they went to the pur
sui vant officer and then to the pur
sui vant messengers. Then we will have the seven trumpets. This whole
system is to allow time for repentance or change of attitude.
“Then the seven angels [the pur sui vant messengers] who had the seven trumpets,” the articular
present active participle of the verb e)xw,
“who had.” Then the nominative plural definite article used as a relative
pronoun, “who.” The perfective present tense refers to what has come to be in
the past but is emphasises as a present reality. These pur sui vant messengers had this category of judgment but it is now
emphasised as the reality of the Tribulation. The active voice: the pur sui
vant messengers are going to be the administrators. The participle denotes
a future purpose for the seven trumpets.
Then we have the accusative direct object of the
participle composed of two words: a very simple accusative plural definite
article paj, “the”; the adjective
numeral e(pta, “seven”; and the noun salpigc for “trumpets.” And “they have prepared
themselves,” the aorist active indicative of e)toimazw.
Everyone has to prepare before he can be used by
God. No matter how high you are in God’s plan or no matter how low you are, you
can’t be anything without preparation. You can’t run off half-cocked. God uses
prepared men. The active voice: the seven pur
sui vant messengers produce the action and while the preparation modus
operandi is not given it does emphasise a principle: preparation is necessary
for any function involving the decisions of eternal God. Both elect angels and
regenerate mankind must constantly prepare themselves and be prepared to carry
out God’s plan for history. Your preparation as a believer is in perception of
Bible doctrine. The indicative mood is declarative for the reality of
preparation necessary to execute the will of God.
And this is a very rare use of a)utoj. Every now and then this word is used in its
original connotation of the Classical Greek which is an intensive pronoun. Here
it is used as an intensive pronoun, the accusative plural direct object. The
function of the intensive pronoun is to emphasise identity, therefore it is
demonstrative force intensified. This is the predicate use of the intensive
pronoun and that is why it is translated “themselves,” “they prepared
themselves.” Their purpose is given in the final phrase, a final purpose clause
from the conjunction i(na, “they prepared themselves
that.” The semi-final purpose clause is one which denotes the direction or the
action of the main verb toward a given result. The result anticipated is the
answer to the imprecatory prayers of the Tribulational believers, “that they
might give the signal with the trumpets,” the aorist active subjunctive of the
verb salpizw, and it means to give an
order with a trumpet, to produce a blast on a trumpet, to sound off. The aorist
tense is a culminative aorist, it views the sounding of the trumpet call or
signal in its entirety but it emphasises the existing result, the answer to the
prayers of the Tribulational believers and the administration of terrible judgment.
The active voice: each pur sui vant
messenger produces the action of the verb in sequence, not simultaneously. The
subjunctive mood is a potential subjunctive used to form or construct a
semi-final purpose clause.
The first four trumpet signals are directed against
nature while the last three trumpets signals are the three woes directed
against mankind in a very dramatic way. The drama comes from the fact that
demons are allowed to attack people.
As the seven angels prepare to sound it reminds us
several facts that we can anticipate. These trumpets judgements are
supernatural rather than natural judgements. They are the consequence of man’s
erroneous decisions. Man is the product of his own decisions; man is the
product of his own adversity through making bad decisions. The natural result
of bad decisions is first of all self-induced, self-imposed misery — the
concept of we reap what we sow. But these trumpet judgements are much more than
that, they are natural consequences of man’s reversionism, his apostasy, his
degeneration, but they are supernatural in character. Many believers will
survive all of the historical disasters of the Tribulation but they will
survive because they have a personal sense of destiny, a fantastic humility and
flexibility. The believer in the Church Age living in a client nation to God
has a dual destiny they do not have. We have a personal sense of destiny
related to the plan of God for our lives and, of course, that means living in
the divine dynasphere. But we also have a national sense of destiny related to
the advance to maturity, forming the pivot, and that brings us to the point of
prosperity for the nation. As goes the believer in this dispensation, so goes
the client nation. Only the first category is open to these Tribulational
believers, they only have available to them the personal sense of destiny
related to the plan of God. There are no client nations in the Tribulation. To
survive the cataclysms of the Tribulation the believer must have a personal
sense of destiny related to his perception and application of Bible doctrine.
(We have far more than that today, we even have a greater challenge) With a
personal sense of destiny from Bible doctrine the believer’s confidence is
related to his humility which produces fantastic application and flexibility,
and there will be many survivors.
We now note the four trumpets of judgment in this
passage, verses 7-13. They will be quite different from the final trumpets
which are demon invasions and will give us the chance to study the whole realm
of demonology.
The first of these trumpet judgements is found in
verse 7. The connective conjunction kai introduces a result from
what precedes and is translated, “And then.” The adjective prwtoj is a nominative singular and with the generic use
of the definite article identifies the category of trumpeters, pur sui vant messengers in the college
of heralds. The noun a)ggeloj is the subject and the
first of the trumpeters, but we do not have a)ggeloj here in the original although it does occur later on in verse eight.
So we will translate it correctly here: “Then the first one [the first angel, a
pur sui vant messenger in the college
of herald].” This is the first one, a)ggeloj does not occur in the
original. It has been included in the King James version.
Then we have the aorist active indicative of salpizw which means to sound a trumpet, to give a signal
with a trumpet, and we translate it, “sounded his trumpet.” We will see this
verb in this form seven times before we are through, all of the way from this
chapter to chapter eleven. “Then the first one sounded [gave a signal on] his
trumpet,” for the administration of the first judgment. The aorist tense is a
constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. It
takes up everything we will note with regard to the first judgment and gathers
it into one concept. The active voice: the first pur sui vant messenger
actually produces the action. The declarative indicative mood is for a simple
statement of fact in the field of eschatology.
Now we see a terrible storm in the phrases that
follow. It is introduced with the aorist middle indicative of the verb ginomai. The verb means to be, to become, but here it is
translated correctly, “and there followed.” It is giving a sequential result
from the sounding of the trumpet. The aorist tense is a constative aorist,
again contemplating the action of the verb in its entirety. It takes up the
first judgment against the world’s vegetation in its entirety. This is a middle
voice but being a deponent verb, middle in form, active in meaning, and again
the action is produced by a terrible storm. The indicative mood is declarative
for the historical reality of divine judgment. This is a judgment which does
not come from man’s bad decisions, it comes from God as a result of the
imprecatory prayers. What follows then rescinds the mandate of Revelation
7:2,3. With this order rescinded the first four trumpet judgements are against
vegetation on land. The second is against the salt water of the seas and the
third is against the fresh water such as lakes and rivers. Finally there is the
fourth trumpet which has to do with judgment against the atmosphere. Each
category produces a tremendous amount of suffering to the unbelievers of the
earth during the Tribulation. This, again, is in answer to the imprecatory
prayers.
“Then the first one sounded his trumpet, and there
followed ...” The predicate nominative is made up of several words. First of
all xalaz, used generally for hail,
and then we have another, pur for fire, translated “hail
and fire.” The word “fire” is possibly lightning but there is another Greek
word for lightning. In Exodus 9:24 one of the great plagues was a terrible
thunderstorm and it was described in similar words. It was the worst storm in
the land of Egypt since it had become a nation. Now we have another one of
those supernatural thunderstorms directly from heaven. The first plague of
Egypt is very similar except that this judgment is intensified.
With this we have the perfect passive participle
from mignumi, and it means to mix,
“which had been mixed.” The perfect is a tense of completed action, therefore
the action is viewed as a finished product. The perfect tense implies the
process of mixing blood with an intensified tropical thunderstorm, but a
process consummated and existing in a finished state. So when the storm hits
you have everything we have today but you have blood mixed in with it. This is
the intensive perfect in which special attention is directed to the results of
the action and the existing fact is intensified. The passive voice: the
terrible thunderstorm receives the action of the verb, it is mixed with blood.
The participle is circumstantial and this is followed by a prepositional phrase
e)n plus the instrumental of
manner from a(ima, correctly translated,
“which had been mixed with blood.” The instrumental of manner indicates that we
have here literal blood, not like the blood of Christ which we have studied in
terms of redemption, reconciliation, etc., the saving work of Christ on the
cross. This blood was first mentioned in Revelation 6:10 which records the
imprecatory prayers in summary of the Tribulational martyrs and this same blood
is now mixed with this supernatural and therefore unusual thunderstorm. “How
long will it be fore you avenge our blood on the population of the earth.” The
blood of the Tribulational martyrs is mixed with that tropical storm and then
it hits a certain part of the earth. What this really is is wind shear, a
down-burst in which a strong wind is actually smashed against the surface of
the earth. And it is not only wind shear and its manifestation in a down-burst
but it is one that is mixed with blood. In other words, all of the blood that
these people shed is going to cover them when this storm hits them. The storm
does not destroy people as much as it does vegetation.
How do we know it is wind shear? The aorist passive
indicative of the verb ballw, a
word that means to throw but it also means to hurl, and we will translate it,
“and it was hurled.” This is a down-burst. The passive voice: the thunderstorm,
the hail, the fire mixed with blood, receives the action of the verb in a
tremendous down-burst. Then we have the prepositional phrase e)ij plus the accusative of gh,
“to the earth.” This is how we know that it is a down-burst. Wind shear has
only been recently discovered and distinguished from tornadoes.
Corrected translation: “Then the first one [the
angel or the pur sui vant officer in
the college of heralds] sounded his trumpet [gave the signal] and there
followed a terrible thunder storm, hail and fire which had been mixed with
blood [of the Tribulational martyrs, Rev. 6:9,10], and it [the supernatural
thunderstorm] was hurled to the earth [the phenomenon known as wind shear or
down-burst].”
Next we
have to notice that there are some results from this activity. All of the
results occur in the area of burning. Three times in the result column we have
the aorist passive indicative of the verb katakainw. Katakainw means to burn up, to consume, to destroy by fire.
The culminative aorist tense views the down-burst of the supernatural
thunderstorm in its entirety but regards it from the viewpoint of its existing
results. The fire or lightning in the thunderstorm has great destructive
effect, it destroys one third of the land surface, one third of the trees and
one third of the green grass. Later on we will discuss the problem of what
third. The passive voice: one third of the land surface, one third of the
trees, one third of the grass, receives the action of the verb. The indicative
mood is declarative for the reality of these results. We translate: “and with
the result that one third of the land surface was destroyed by fire; one third
of the trees were burned up plus one third of the green grass”.
By green grass is meant agricultural grains, like
hay. Both natural vegetation and cultivated plant life is included. Along with
the tress all plant life provides oxygen on the surface of the earth, so this
is a matter of general health of humanity from both food and atmosphere. The cultivated
part of the land surface is called gh, while the natural plant
life is derived from the noun xortoj which is translated “grass”
but also includes grain. A destruction of the great rain forests like those in
Central and South America, or those in the Congo basin, or the Indo-Malayan
rain forests, would be very detrimental to mankind on the earth. The
terrestrial vegetation of the world may be classified into three categories of
plant life: grassland, desert, and forest. Desert here is not a reference to
sand but to the high desert areas and other places where grazing exists.
Grasslands of the world actually cover 13,000,000 square miles of valuable
grazing land. Of this area three and a half million square miles are suitable
for the production of cold weather crops, grass like wheat, rye, oats. Six
million eight hundred thousand square miles are suitable for warm weather
crops, cotton, etc. Two million seven hundred thousand square miles are
suitable for grazing only. That is what the grasslands produce and the
grasslands are caught in this judgment so that one third of that is destroyed.
A tremendous impact on mankind is therefore provided in the first third of this
trumpet judgment.
What about the desert grazing land? The deserts
cover some 17,000,000 square miles of good grazing land, good for either
grazing or irrigation in farming. The fact that the entire world contains
approximately 26,000,000 square miles suitable for grazing, 12,800,000 square
miles good for producing warm weather crops, and about eleven and a half
million square miles capable of producing cold weather crops, it can be seen
immediately that when the desert is hit as well then you are destroying a great
portion of the world’s food supply. The natural forests of the world cover an
area of approximately 22,000,000 square miles. About 14,000,000 square miles
are capable of being converted into crop-producing land. The tremendous
devastation of this supernatural storm can be pictured which destroys one third
of the high grass savannahs, the tall grass savannahs, the desert grass
savannahs, marsh grass, short grass, desert shrubbery, rain forest, etc. The
devastation of this judgment staggers the imagination.
The adverse affects on weather, food supply, and
many other factors would be devastating to mankind on earth during the
Tribulation.
Translation
of verse seven: “Then the first one [the angel or the pur sui vant officer in the college of heralds] sounded his trumpet
[gave the signal] and there followed a terrible thunder storm, hail and fire
which had been mixed with blood [of the Tribulational martyrs — Rev. 6:9,10],
and it [the supernatural thunderstorm] was hurled to the earth [the phenomenon
known as wind shear or down-burst]: with the result that one third of the land
surface was destroyed by fire, both a third of the trees was burned up plus all
the green grasses.”
A similar prophecy is found in Joel 1:15-20, “What a
dreadful day! [the day of the Tribulation] for the day of the Lord is near
[second advent], and it will come as destruction from the Almighty.” Has not
food been cut off from before our eyes, yes, joy and gladness from the house of
our God? And the seeds shrivel under their clods, the storehouses for food are
desolate, barns are torn down; for grain has dried up. How the cattle groan!
the herds mill about, because there is no pasture; yes, even the flocks of
sheep are suffering. To you, O Lord, I call: for fire has devoured the open
pastures, and the flame has burned up all the trees of the forests. Even the
wild animals of the field pant for you: for the watering holes have dried up,
and fire has devoured the open grazing land.” This is an amplification of the
first trumpet judgment.
The judgements which we have noted in Revelation up
to the time of the trumpet judgements are the result of man’s bad decisions.
Bad decisions result in judgment. But we have now come to a point where God
directly judges mankind and the first four trumpet judgements are judgements
related to nature. We now move on to verses eight and nine where we see the
judgements of the second trumpet.
Verse 8, we have the sequential use of the
conjunction kai, translated “then,” and we
have the adjective numeral deuteroj which means “second.” With
it, again, the same subject as always a)ggeloj, “the second angel,” and it refers to one of the members of the
college of heralds, the fourth category, the pur sui vant messenger. Then follows the verb, the aorist active
indicative of the verb salpizw, and it means to sound a
trumpet. We translate: “Then the second angel [the pur sui vant messenger from the college of heralds] sounded his
trumpet.” The constative aorist contemplates the action of the verb in its
entirety, this is the second trumpet judgment against nature. The active voice:
the pur sui vant messenger produces
the action of the verb. The indicative mood is declarative for a simple
statement of fact. This is a judgment from heaven. This signal on the trumpet
begins the second judgment given in direct answer to the imprecatory prayers of
Tribulational believers: a judgment against the seas of the world, specifically
salt water areas.
The seas of the world with their salt water form
ninety-eight per cent of the world’s water supply which means that two per cent
of all the water available on the earth’s surface is fresh water. This would be
more than adequate were it not that the world’s greatest reserves are locked
inaccessibly in our ice caps. The problem therefore is to provide fresh water
when and where it is needed and to ensure that it is not used faster than it
can be replaced. The oceans of the world are nature’s reservoirs for this.
Water evaporates from them to fall as rain and snow over land. So we actually
get our fresh water from evaporation of salt water and from the land it returns
mostly through rivers to the sea. Therefore the maximum amount of fresh water
available depends on precipitation which depends on evaporation from the seas.
This judgment is an attack on the salt water seas; the next trumpet judgment
will be an attack upon fresh water, lakes, and rivers.
So we have a great mountain of burning fire which is
suddenly used at this point, the aorist active indicative gives us our next
verb, ballw, which actually means here
to hurl. A great mountain of burning fire is hurled into the sea; “and became,”
the aorist middle indicative of ginomai, which means to come, to
follow, here it means to become; “and a third of the seas became blood.” This
is a similar judgment found in Exodus 17:20, also mentioned in Psalm 105:29. It
describes the first plague in Egypt and Psalm 105:29 puts it this way: “He
[Aaron, serving Moses] turned their waters into blood, and caused their fish to
die.” Of course, this came from God through Aaron and Moses. This was a local judgment
against the Pharaoh of Egypt but here in Revelation this is a universal judgment
against the seas and oceans of the earth.
Translation: “Then the second angel sounded his
trumpet, and a great mountain of burning fire it was hurled into the sea: and a
third of the seas became blood.”
The significance of the blood here is twofold. First
of all it is a reminder to the unbelievers of the Tribulation that they have
rejected the only way of salvation which has been given to them through
evangelism and personal witnessing under the title: “The blood of Christ, God’s
Son cleanses from all sin,” redemption, reconciliation and propitiation. The
second reason is that the blood acts as a pollution, a salt water pollution.
The importance of oceans and seas in sustaining the natural balance cannot be
overestimated. Pollution on the ocean therefore becomes a very serious matter.
The great mountain of burning fire will pollute oceans and seas up to one third
by turning them in to blood. The Tribulational results of the second trumpet
will be noted in verse nine.
Verse 9, When it says that a third of the creatures
which were in the sea died, we have the aorist active indicative of the verb a)poqnhskw. The aorist tense is a constative aorist, it
contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. The active voice:
creatures of the sea produce the action. The indicative mood is declarative for
the reality of this judgment. Fish and other sea food offer valuable protein in
the diet of mankind. Many of the countries of the world depend on sea foods for
their very existence. Again, this is reference to the four horsemen of the
apocalypse where hunger is one of the great causes for death in the
Tribulation.
There is also an effect on shipping, for it says at
the end of this verse, “a third of the shipping was destroyed,” the aorist
passive indicative of diafqeirw, and it does mean to
destroy in the very same sense as death. This is the death to shipping. The
passive voice means the subject receives the action of the verb and the
shipping itself was destroyed. The economic wealth of many nations depends on
their shipping and their trade.
It will be
noticed that in verses eight and nine we have a general attack on all salt
water, the oceans and the seas, and the shipping. Translation: “Then a third of
the creatures in the sea, having life, died; also a third of the shipping was
destroyed.”
The largest ocean in the world is the Pacific which
covers 63,855,000 square miles, with a maximum depth of 36,198 feet. It is
deeper than the highest height, Mount Everest. Next is the Atlantic which has
31,744,000 square miles. When you add these up plus all of the many other seas
of the world it can be seen how devastating this second trumpet judgment will
be.
That brings us, then, to another body of water,
fresh water, in verses 10-11, the judgment of the third trumpet.
Verse 10, We have a word in the Greek which is used
at least three different ways, a)sthr. It is correctly translated
“star.” Sometimes it refers to a celestial body, sometimes it refers to a
planet, and sometimes it refers to angelic creatures. In the Old Testament
“star” is even used for achievement.
“Then the third angel [the pur sui vant messenger] sounded his trumpet, and a great star,
burning like a torch, fell from heaven.” The word “great” which is used with
it, megaj, also is significant. It
means “great.” Actually, this time it is not a star. This is a giant meteor, a
transient celestial body that enters the earth’s atmosphere with great
velocity. It has incandescence with heat. It is luminous and shiny with the heat
generated by the resistance of the air. We will translate this then: “ a giant
meteor, incandescent like a lamp, fell from the sky.”
“and it fell on a third of the rivers and lakes.”
The words “springs of waters” actually means lakes. This contamination is from
a giant meteor and it affects one third of the fresh water supply of planet
earth, specifically the rivers and the lakes. All of the lakes of the world add
up to a considerable body of water, one third of which will be contaminated.
Translation of verse 10: “Then the third angel
sounded his trumpet, a giant meteor, incandescent, fell from the sky, and it
fell on the third of the rivers and the lakes.”
At this point we stop to notice a principle of
interpretation. All three of these first judgements talk about a third being
affected. The judgements are literal, they are local, they are lucid, and they
are locked in. And these are the three principles that we should note.
First of all the judgements we are studying are
literal, they are not to be taken symbolically. These judgements come from
heaven, they are related to natural phenomena but they are administered in a
supernatural way by the angelic college of heralds.
Secondly we note that these judgements are local.
That is, a third of the earth or a third of the seas and oceans, or a third of
the lakes and rivers, are affected. It is the local area where the hail and the
fire and the giant meteor hits that is the area affected. So when these areas
are affected it is wherever the judgment hits and from there it moves out
locally to one third of planet earth.
The third thing we note is that these judgements are
lucid. No question as to what is affected in the four trumpet judgements.
Finally, we note that these judgements are locked
in. The certainty of these future judgements as a part of historical trends of
the Tribulation is as certain as the Word of God which lives forever and ever.
And by way of application to us in the Church Age, just as certainly as these
things will occur so we as believers in this dispensation can anticipate some
great historical disaster, which we are now experiencing.
The recipients of these judgements are the
unbelievers of the Tribulation. No believers are destroyed by these judgements
from God. To the contrary, these trumpet judgements are the results of the
imprecatory prayers of Tribulational believers. Two categories of Tribulational
believers exist at this time, those who have been martyred, and they are
treated as Old Testament saints, and those who survive the Tribulation to the
point of the second advent, they are treated as Millennial believers. The
Tribulation then becomes what we would have to classify as a transitional
dispensation that marks the dividing line between two categories of believers.
And since the Tribulation is the extension of and termination of the
dispensation of Israel, i.e. Daniel’s seventieth week, those believers who are
martyred are going to be classified with the Old Testament saints. They will
receive their resurrection bodies with the rest of the Old Testament believers
at the second advent.
In other words, remember the doctrine of
resurrection. The resurrection takes place under the Greek word tacij which in 1 Corinthians 15 means battalion, “every
man in his own battalion.” In resurrection there are two battalions. The first
battalion is made up of believers only, the second battalion is made up of
unbelievers only. The second battalion is the resurrection which takes place at
the end of time, the great white throne judgment where the unbelievers are cast
into the lake of fire. But the first battalion is broken down into four
companies and is pictured as a battalion review. Alpha Company moves out first
and has already passed the reviewing stand. That is our Lord Jesus Christ. Next
comes Bravo Company, the Rapture of the Church. Then Charlie company, the Old
Testament saints at the second advent. Delta Company follows last, and that
would be the resurrection body given to Millennial saints at the end of the Millennium.
So you have four different companies involved in the resurrection and they take
place at different times. Since the Tribulation, then, is a separate
dispensation preceding the Millennium these believers who survive the
Tribulation will become the cadre for the Millennial believers.
Here is the point of application. At
the beginning of the Millennium there are believers only because that is the
beginning of a civilisation. All the unbelievers of the Millennium will be the
children of believing parents or grandparents. Since life is extended in the
Millennium that means that all unbelievers have parents and grandparents who
are believers. The principle is one that you must never forget and it must
never become a source of unhappiness to you. How your children turn out may or
may not be your responsibility. In most cases it is not. In the time in which
we live because of drugs and because of the evil society in which we live, in
which drugs are tolerated, in which you are ostracised through social groups if
you
Principles from what we have done in Revelation
1. The third world is a perfect example of negative
volition toward Bible doctrine, rejection of establishment, and the function of
the cosmic system.
2. All life is not valuable, criminals must be
executed, the enemy killed, the lazy and the degenerate destroyed, as a part of
divine discipline.
3. Impersonal love is designed to benefit the human
race; personal love is optional, designed for interaction of a few.
4. Virtue is developed through divine laws of
establishment — believers and unbelievers, and the divine dynasphere where
virtue is developed for believers only.
5. Impersonal love is a problem-solver. Christ
solved the sin problem through impersonal love. Personal love is not a problem-solver
but often a distraction. Or, personal love is often a distraction to
relationship with God; impersonal love is the result of relationship with God.
The principle of energy
Energy minus ability, energy without ability, is
misdirected arrogance. Energy without ability produces mental attitude
arrogance or inordinate ambition. When people have energy and no ability they
become troublemakers. They are a source of dissension in any organisation.
Energy without ability results in self-righteous
arrogance, crusader arrogance. Crusader and self-righteous arrogance always
combine to form a person who sticks his nose into everyone else’s business,
intrudes into the privacy of others, becomes a gossip or maligner, tries to run
your life and control your life, or the person who tries to intimidate you.
Energy without ability produces conspiracy
arrogance, sexual arrogance, iconoclastic arrogance, morality arrogance, the
arrogance of Christian service. People who have energy but no ability to serve
the Lord are always using their energy in pseudo systems of Christian
production.
Ability without energy is lack of motivation, lack
of self-discipline. This, of course, is the other side of the story. Ability
without energy, lack of motivation, and lack of self-discipline is what we
might call the arrogance of laziness.
The controlled energy of hard work, on the other
hand, produces ability and ability channels hard work into fields of productive
success. This is simply saying that ability is acquired through hard work,
through dedication, through plugging. Energy plus ability is the true drive in
life. Energy is basically created in the body but ability is created in the
attitudes of the soul. The ability is created in the motivational function of
the soul, not the IQ of the soul, not the emotion of the soul, not even the
self-consciousness of the soul. Motivation in the soul produces the decisions
to take in doctrine on a daily basis regardless of circumstances, distractions,
or discouragement. Both energy and ability are harnessed through perception and
application of doctrine. Therefore, energy plus ability must be related to
doctrine and wisdom otherwise a pseudo drive is created and all pseudo drives
terminate in the modus operandi of the cosmic system.
Our Lord’s energy and wisdom, His ability during His
first advent, was derived from His residence and function in the prototype
divine dynasphere and it resulted in the greatest of all victories in human
history, the strategic victory of the cross. Our Lord’s wisdom, coupled with
His energy and ability at the second advent will set in motion the greatest
reign in all of human history. Jesus Christ will rule the world. In the
meantime, of course, our Lord has provided for us the divine dynasphere so that
we can face and overcome every disaster in life. Our Lord has seen fit through
the vehicle of eschatology to give us an account of the greatest period of
historical disaster, the Tribulation, duplicated often in our lives and in our
lifetime but with a difference: we have the means of meeting any disaster, any
tragedy, any situation in life, and overcoming it.
Verse 11, the result of what happened when the
meteor struck the fresh water supply. We begin by noting the name of the
meteor. We have discussed the word a)sthr which can be a star, it can
be an angel, it can refer to a human being who achieves, it also refers to a
meteor. “And the name of the meteor is called,” the present passive indicative
of legw, translated here “to call.”
The perfective present tense refers to a fact which has come to be in the past
but is emphasised as a present reality. The passive voice: the name or
designation of the meteor is going to receive the action of the verb in this
verse. The indicative mood is declarative for a simple statement of fact, and
with that comes the fact, the predicate nominative of the Greek word a)psinqoj, transliterated “absinthe,” a very famous wine in
France and made more famous by what the French Legionnaires did when they had
too much of it. Today the name absinthe is the name of a green alcoholic
liqueur containing oil of wormwood and annis. It was famous in the French
Foreign Legion by causing nervous derangements and wild hallucinations. But it
is translated in our verse “wormwood” and that is a possible translation, the
only problem being that wormwood is not a deadly poison and we are dealing with
a pollution where fresh water is concerned. Whatever a)psinqoj was it killed many people. Absinthe or wine
prepared with wormwood was well-known in the ancient world. Wormwood is a
plant. The oil from the plant has a very strong bitter taste. The oil was also
used to destroy intestinal worms in the ancient world and was considered a
great cure. It was also used to manufacture absinthe in the ancient world as
well and since the noun is used for wormwood perhaps a few scriptures will give
us an idea as to exactly what the Bible has in mind by calling this meteor
“Wormwood.”
Proverbs 5:3,4 — here wormwood is used for hooking
up with the wrong doll! “For the lips of an adulterous woman drip honey, and
her palate is smoother than oil of frankincense. But in the end she is as
bitter as wormwood.” Wormwood here is a frustrated relationship with a member
of the opposite sex. A bitter experience is what it connotes here.
The word for wormwood in the Hebrew is not the same
as the Greek, it is laanah, and it is
exactly the same as absinthe in the Greek. Wormwood is identified generally in
the Bible with some form of discipline: to an individual has made some kind of
a mistake in a relationship with a member of the opposite sex, or for a nation
which has failed as a client nation. The latter is the meaning that Jeremiah
assigns to it in Jeremiah 9:15, “Therefore thus saith the Lord of the armies,
the God of Israel [our Lord Jesus Chris]; Behold, I will feed this people
[referring to Israel about to be punished with the fifth cycle of discipline]
with wormwood [wormwood is the administration of the fifth cycle of discipline
to the client nation Israel], I will give them poisoned water to drink.”
The explanation in Jeremiah 9:16 follows: “I will
scatter them among the nations [that’s wormwood], whom neither they nor their
fathers have known [the Chaldeans in 586 BC; the Romans in 70 AD]: I will send the sword after them until I
have annihilated them.” This is what wormwood means.
Now we have a giant meteor called Wormwood because
it is the vehicle for the administration of God’s justice on unbelievers of the
Tribulation. Wormwood connotes divine judgment and the giant meteor is the means
of administrating that judgment under the fifth trumpet. We must remember that
Wormwood is the name of the meteor and not what pollutes the water. So the
giant meteor, incandescent, burning like a lamp or a torch, is a symbol of
divine judgment on fresh water upon planet earth. The judgment is literal. We
will stay with the translation of the name of the meteor, Wormwood, because it
always connotes some form of divine judgment.
“Therefore, thus saith the Lord of the armies,
‘Behold I am going to feed them wormwood, and make them drink poisonous water:
for from the prophets in Jerusalem pollution has gone out throughout the entire
land’.”
The real pollution in that passage is false teaching
from the prophets and this real pollution is the basis for divine judgment, or
wormwood. Wormwood depicts the anti-pivot in a client nation, and specifies
idolatry in Israel as the gathering point for those who reject Bible doctrine.
Deuteronomy 29:18, “Lest there be among you any man,
or woman, or family, or tribe, whose right lobe turns away today from the Lord
our God, to go and serve the gods of those Gentile nations; lest there shall be
among you a root bearing poison fruit and wormwood.” Only believers who are
positive toward doctrine ever survive wormwood type judgment.
This is the subject of Lamentations chapter three,
beginning at verse 15. In verses 15-19 we see the wormwood judgment, “He has
filled me with bitterness, he has made me drunk with wormwood.” Now the
wormwood is described as a literal judgment. “He has broken my teeth with
gravel, he has caused me to cower in the dust. My life has been deprived of its
prosperity: I have forgotten the good [I have forgotten what blessing is]. So I
think my strength is gone and so has my hope from the Lord: I remember my
adversity and my straying, I remember the wormwood, the bitterness [the meaning
of wormwood].”
Deliverance by logistical grace from wormwood judgment
is mentioned in verses 20-26, a passage which should remind us that no wormwood
judgment ever touches the advancing or the mature believer. This becomes
important in the interpretation of the next chapter because wormwood judgements
are going to include demon invasions, and demon invasions are going to first
torture and then destroy unbelievers in the cosmic system, and believers in the
cosmic system; believers and unbelievers who are serving Satan. But no believer
who is positive toward doctrine and advancing will ever be disturbed by a
wormwood judgment.
“Definitely my soul remembers, and is humbled within
me. This I recall to mind, therefore I have hope [confidence]. It is of then
Lord’s mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not. They
are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness [great is logistical grace].
The Lord is my portion, thinks my soul; therefore I have confidence in him. The
Lord is good to those who wait for him, to the person who seeks him. It is good
to wait silently or quietly for the deliverance of the Lord.”
And so while the wormwood judgment was being administered
as the fifth cycle of discipline to Israel, the subject of Lamentations, it was
not true where believers had Bible doctrine and were advancing. And just as
Jeremiah was delivered from the wormwood judgment of the fifth cycle of
discipline in BC
586 so Tribulational believers will be delivered from the wormwood judgment of
the third trumpet.
“And the name of the giant meteor is called
Wormwood.” Then we have a description of the wormwood judgment in the
Tribulation, “Now one third of the waters [fresh waters: lakes, rivers]
became,” the aorist active indicative of the verb ginomai, which means to follow, to be, to become. The constative aorist tense
contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. It takes the third trumpet
and gathers it into a single whole, the pollution of one third of the fresh
water supply of the earth. The active voice: the fresh water supply, two per
cent of all water on the earth, produces the action of the verb.
The indicative mood is declarative for the reality
of the pollution of one third of the world’s fresh water supply.
The importance of water for sustaining life cannot
be overestimated. Here is an ellipsis generally not recognised, therefore the
word “polluted” is inserted between the verb ginomai and the preposition e)ij, plus the accusative of
wormwood [e)ij plus a)psinqoj], and it is translated like this: “and the
name of the giant meteor is called Wormwood: now one third of the [fresh]
waters became polluted [poisoned] because of the meteor called Wormwood; in
fact many of the human race [unbelievers] died,” the aorist active indicative
of a)poqnhskw, meaning to die. The
culminative aorist tense views the death of many people in its entirety but
regards it from the viewpoint of existing results. The verb denotes the end of judgment
for many people in the world. The waters were polluted by some form of poison
or disease-bearing germs, many unbelievers drank it and died. The active voice:
the Tribulational unbeliever produces the action. The indicative mood is declarative
for the results of water pollution, the judgment of many Tribulational
unbelievers. Then we have e)k plus the ablative of u(dor, “from the waters,” and then the causal conjunction
o(ti, “because,” the aorist
passive indicative from the verb pikrainw, meaning to be made bitter
or polluted. It not only means to make bitter, it also means hostility, to
become hostile, it also means to be polluted, and that is exactly the way we
will translate it: “because they were polluted [they were made hostile or
bitter].”
Many diseases are communicated by means of water.
Even metallic poisoning, especially lead poisoning, can be transmitted through
the water supply. Between 1920 and 1936, a period of seventeen years, there
were 412 reported water-born epidemics of disease in the United States of
America. This affected 115,000 people and caused 955 deaths. These are just
normal functions, not divine judgment.
Pollution of fresh water falls into three
categories: a microbe such as virus and bacteria, natural pollution from human
or animal waste, environmental pollution such as industrial chemicals and toxic
waste, acid rain from polluted air. Streams, rivers, lakes, and small
reservoirs should not be used as a direct source of home water supply because
of the potential danger from pollution. Modern systems for the purification of
water are generally excellent but not foolproof. However, this judgment of the
third trumpet far exceeds any problem or any danger hitherto known to man or
anything that is related to fresh water problems. This pollution of water is
supernatural and will claim the lives of hundreds of thousands and perhaps
millions of unbelievers in the Tribulation.
The fourth trumpet is the most difficult of all.
This is the one that is going to affect the atmosphere.
Verse 12, “And the fourth angel [the pur sui vant messenger] sounded his
trumpet, then a third of the sun, a third of the moon, and a third of the stars
were struck,” the aorist passive indicative of the word plessw which means to strike, to hit. Figuratively, when
used of celestial bodies it means to lose, at least temporarily, at least one
third of their radiation. So we are talking about loss of light. The stars here
refer to the planets in the solar system only. They were struck, meaning loss
of light, loss of radiation at its source. The culminative aorist tense views
the event in its entirety — the striking of the moon, the sun and the planets —
but regards it from the viewpoint of existing results: loss of radiation. The
passive voice: the sun, the moon, and the planets [stars] receive the action of
the verb, they were struck so that their light was lost up to one third. The
indicative mood is declarative for the reality of this divine judgment in
relationship to the solar system to celestial bodies.
The gravitational attraction of the sun controls the
orbits of the planets. The sun is a rotating nuclear furnace composed mostly of
hydrogen and helium which constantly emit energy. Periodically magnetic fields
develop on the surface areas of the sun called sunspots. They are darker in
appearance simply because they are slightly cooler. Associated with these
disturbances which last for weeks are streams of gas which are called prominences.
Such activity affects the earth’s magnetic fields as well as its atmosphere and
weather. Maximum sunspot activity occurs during eleven-year cycles. From the
sun comes the gamma rays, the X-rays, the ultra violet rays, visible light,
infra red, and radio waves. These waves are called the sun’s electromagnetic radiation.
Only some of the longer waves penetrate the atmosphere and reach the earth’s
surface. The atmosphere therefore acts as a filter and it filters these rays.
In the final layer around the earth, known as the troposphere, we have
nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, which supports life and becomes the abode of
circulating air and water which creates our climate. So it can be seen that to
knock out the normal function of these things would be a very disastrous thing.
In our passage, when this fourth pur sui vant messenger blows his
trumpet, light, solar winds, and radiation is cut down by one third at the
source. The same is true of the moon and the planets in the solar system, and
that is what the first part of verse 12 is actually saying.
The actual result begins with the conjunction i(na. It is translated, “so that,” “a third of them,”
and then we have the aorist subjunctive from the verb skotizw, “were darkened.” The constative aorist
contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. The active voice: star or
planets of the solar system produce the action. The subjunctive mood is for the
purpose clause.
“and the day might not shine for a third of it,” the
aorist active subjunctive of fainw plus the negative mh continues the purpose clause, “might not give light
[or might not shine].” The culminative aorist contemplates the action of the
verb in its entirety but regards it from the viewpoint of existing results, the
blackout of one third of each day. The active voice: both the day and the night
produce the action of the verb. The subjunctive mood is used as a part of the
purpose clause. And then it adds in corrected translation, kai nuc o(moioj, “and the night likewise [in the same way].”
Verse13, the message of the eagle
herald. We begin by noting the aorist active indicative of o(raw plus the aorist active indicative of a)kouw. This is the beginning of the transition to the
demon invasions in chapter nine. “I observed and I heard.” The aorist tense in
each case is a constative aorist, it gathers the observation into one entirety.
The active voice of each verb: John the apostle produces the action. The
indicative mood is for the reality of what he now observes and hears.
We have the objective genitive composed of two
words, the numeral e(ij which should be translated
“one” and it will be noticed that there is no word for the numeral in the King
James version. Then a)etoj is for an eagle, “I saw one
eagle.” A problem arises immediately. Is this an eagle or an angel? The Greek
says eagle but this is an angel. However, that is an interpretation rather than
a translation. The Greek word favours “eagle” but the eagle in reality is the
angelic herald of Revelation 4:7 who, it will be remembered, is in the highest
echelon of the college of heralds. He is a herald, “the fourth angelic herald
[says Revelation 4:7] was like a flying eagle.” So the fourth angelic herald
who bears the eagle escutcheon is the one who proclaims the coming of the three
woes of the last two trumpet judgements. So what we have is: “Then I observed
and heard one flying eagle,” the fourth herald of Revelation 4:7.
Next follows the ascriptive use of the present
active participle petomai which means “flying,” and
here the present active participle is a complementary participle used to
complete the action of the verb. It is said to be flying in mid heaven,
referring to the second heaven which is the realm of angelic activity,
according to Acts 7:42. Remember, we have three heavens in the Bible. The first
is the troposphere plus the stratosphere etc. The second heaven the realm of
angelic activity where the fourth herald proclaims these three woes which are
synonymous with trumpets five, six, and seven. The third heaven is the throne
of God, as we noted in Revelation 4:5.
The angels proclamation follows with the present
active participle legw, which means to say, to
speak, and many similar things. It means here to make a proclamation. The
futuristic present tense denotes an event which has not but is regarded as so
certain that in thought it is contemplated as already occurring. The active
voice: the fourth angelic herald, the eagle flying, produces the action. The
participle is circumstantial, and a circumstantial participle can be translated
like a finite verb with the conjunction “and,” “and he said [or proclaimed].”
Next we have the instrumental of manner from two
words, the adjective megaj and the noun fwnh, “with a loud voice.” Then we have three
interjections: o)uai, o)uai,
o)uai, which is comparable to our “woe.” The first woe,
the first use of the interjection here, refers to the fifth trumpet, Revelation
9:1-12. This woe refers to the invasion of the earth by the first demon assault
army, an assault army which at the present time is in jail in the abyss. It
will be led by Abaddon or Apollyon who is second only to Satan in rank among
the fallen angels.
The second woe mentioned here is the sixth trumpet
of Revelation 9:13-21. This is the invasion of the second demon assault army.
The difference between these two armies: the first demon assault army will
torture men on the earth for five months, the second one is a killer army which
will be initiated from under the Euphrates river. Both the fifth and sixth
trumpets of the first two woes are demon invasions of planet earth by hard-core
armies that are not operational at the present time in the Church Age.
The third woe refers to the seventh trumpet of
Revelation 11:15-12:17. This is Satan’s greatest anti-Semitism offensive. Satan
himself leads a third demon army in an attempt to destroy all Israel so that
the second advent cannot occur because there will be no Jews to fulfil the
unconditional promises to.
“Then I observed and heard one eagle [the fourth
herald of Revelation 4:7] flying in mid heaven, and he said in a loud voice,
Woe, Woe, Woe [trumpets five, six, and seven].”
Then we have “to the inhabitants of the earth”.
These are Tribulational unbelievers and Tribulational believers living in the
cosmic system. The present active participle is in the accusative case and it
is from the noun katoikew, used here as a noun with
the generic use of the definite article to describe a special category. The
category refers to people who live in the cosmic system and it will include
believers and unbelievers. Later on in the next chapter we will make the distinction
for believers will be delivered during the Tribulation. They will have their
own special wall of fire of positive volition toward doctrine resulting in
learning doctrine. But there will also be a tremendous amount of negative
volition among some believers and they are also going to be the victims of
these demon attacks.
Next we have a very strange prepositional phrase
because of the way it is translated, e)k plus the ablative of source
or the ablative of origin, sometimes called the ablative of effective cause. It
is not translated like most prepositions, e)k. E)k plus the ablative is ordinarily “from,” but when it
is e)k plus the ablative of
effective cause then it means “because.” Hence it denotes the origin of the
reason. This is a presupposition of the last three trumpet judgements and it is
correctly translated “because.” And then we have the ablative of loipoj, meaning the remaining, and the word fwnh which here means “blasts,” “because of the
remaining blasts of the three angels who are about to sound off.”
Translation: “Then I observed and heard one eagle
flying in mid heaven [the second heaven], and he said with a loud voice, Woe
[reference to the fifth trumpet], Woe [sixth trumpet], Woe [seventh trumpet],
to the inhabitants of the earth because of the remaining blasts of the trumpet
from the three angels who are about to sound off!”
We note, then, that Satan has three attack armies
composed of hard-core demons. None of them are operational at the present time
based on the fact that today they would be wasting their time due to the fact
that the Holy Spirit acts as a special restrainer in this particular
dispensation, the Church Age. Also, because for the only time in history God
the Holy Spirit actually indwells every believer so that demon possession is
impossible. Demon influence is possible. Demon possession, of course is the
invasion of the body by one or more demons; demon influence is the invasion of
the personality and that is possible through residence in the cosmic system.
But the believer cannot be demon possessed. Unbelievers can be demon possessed
but not believers. Both believers and unbelievers can be under demon influence,
the invasion of the personality through residence in the cosmic system. But in
the future there will be a new wrinkle added: demon attack — literal, physical
attack. It is not possible now because God the Holy Spirit acts as a restrainer.
So Satan has three hard-core attack armies and their
mission will be to actually, literally, physically, overtly attack people. This
will be noted in passages coming up. The fascinating thing about all of this,
however, is that these demon armies, one commanded by Satan [the third assault
army], one commanded by his chief of staff, Apollyon or Abaddon [the first
assault army], and the Euphrates army commanded by four demons are going to
attack in the Tribulation, overtly and literally assault, people living in the
cosmic system. That means servants of Satan, for believers and unbelievers in
any dispensation living in the cosmic system are the servants of Satan.
Although Satan is a fantastic genius he is actually going to turn his hard-core
assault armies loose against his own human servants, unbelievers and believers
who reside in the cosmic system. Note: Satan seems to be a little ungrateful!
While the power of Satan, then, is very great and
his genius is even greater than that he is unable to control or co-ordinate his
very own kingdom of darkness which in the last half of the Tribulation will be
out of hand and uncontrollable due to the fact that Satan is no longer in
heaven and no longer controls his armies from heaven. Demon armies attack and
destroy Satan’s human servants. And while it does not make sense and it appears
incompatible with Satan’s genius a study of the cosmic system will aid us to
understand this interpretive principle, for the interpretive principle at this
point is a very important one and one that will come up several times in the
next chapter. Arrogance has no loyalty to arrogance. This principle will be
expanded in many ways.
1. Loyalty, which is a great facet of leadership,
demands integrity, and arrogance has no integrity.
2. Those human beings who live and reside in the
cosmic system do not possess integrity. In fact, many people have integrity
before they enter the cosmic system but once they enter the cosmic system that
cancels their integrity, their honour. Arrogance neutralises integrity.
3. Therefore, anticipating the next chapter,
hard-core demon armies attack Satan’s human servants, which implies that Satan
has lost control of his demon assault armies. The loss of control is that there
is no honour among those who are arrogant.
4. There is no respect for authority where arrogance
has the ascendancy. Smart arrogance will pretend to respect authority to gain
some objective for all operational arrogance is hypocritical, whether among
people or fallen angels versus people.
5. Even Satan himself becomes inconsistent at the
end of the Tribulation. he will attack, he will search and destroy on a mad
search and destroy mission against all unbelieving Jews who live in the cosmic
system in his attempt to destroy all Jews. That means he will attack his own
servants who are Jews as well as believers who are Jews.
6. At least Satan’s great attack leading the third
assault army against the Jews [the seventh trumpet] has reason behind it.
7. Satan is seeking to destroy all Jews before the
second advent of Christ so that God’s promises to Israel are abrogated. The
unconditional covenants to Israel demand living Jews at the second advent.
8. This emphasises to us a great principle. Even
though the unbelievers have served Satan well in the cosmic system and even
though cosmic believers have served Satan well, when Satan is through using
them he discards them.
9. This is the modus operandi used by all arrogant
human beings. All arrogant human beings live in the cosmic system which
intensifies their arrogance, moves it in many directions. Therefore, human
beings living in the cosmic system have neither loyalty, gratitude or the
integrity to appreciate loyal service from subordinates.
10. Many Christians have been shocked by executives
whose promotion and success depended on their hard and faithful service, yet,
when they were no longer useful or because of some pressure became a source of
embarrassment they were discarded without any consideration.
11. Arrogant leadership or executive function knows
no loyalty to faithful subordinates and has no appreciation for past services
rendered.
12. So even service in the cosmic system of the
devil is no protection from the devil or his hard-core demon assault armies who
at this moment are incarcerated in the abyss of Hades, under the water of the
Euphrates.