

      
 2. that old--ancient serpent 
 (Re 12:9).
 
      
 thousand years--As seven mystically implies universality,
 so a thousand implies perfection, whether in good or evil
 [AQUINAS on ch. 11]. Thousand symbolizes
 that the world is perfectly leavened and pervaded by the divine; since
 thousand is ten, the number of the world, raised to the
 third power, three being the number of God 
 [AUBERLEN]. It may denote literally also a
 thousand years.

      
 3. shut him--A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, and
 ANDREAS omit "him."
 
      
 set a seal upon him--Greek, "over him," that is, sealed 
 up the door of the abyss over his head. A surer seal to keep him from 
 getting out than his seal over Jesus in the tomb of Joseph, which was 
 burst on the resurrection morn. Satan's binding at' this juncture is 
 not arbitrary, but is the necessary consequence of the events
 (Re 19:20);
 just as Satan's being cast out of heaven, where he had previously been 
 the accuser of the brethren, was the legitimate judgment which passed 
 on him through the death, resurrection, and ascension of Christ
 (Re 12:7-10).
 Satan imagined that he had overcome Christ on Golgotha, and that his 
 power was secure for ever, but the Lord in death overcame him, and by 
 His ascension as our righteous Advocate cast out Satan, the accuser 
 from heaven. Time was given on earth to make the beast and harlot 
 powerful, and then to concentrate all his power in Antichrist.  The 
 Antichristian kingdom, his last effort, being utterly destroyed by 
 Christ's mere appearing, his power on earth is at an end. He had 
 thought to destroy God's people on earth by Antichristian persecutions 
 (just as he had thought previously to destroy Christ); but the Church 
 is not destroyed from the earth but is raised to rule over it, and 
 Satan himself is shut up for a thousand years in the "abyss" 
 (Greek for "bottomless pit"), the preparatory prison to the 
 "lake of fire," his final doom. As before he ceased by Christ's 
 ascension to be an accuser in heaven, so during the millennium he 
 ceases to be the seducer and the persecutor on earth. As long as the 
 devil rules in the darkness of the world, we live in an atmosphere 
 impregnated with deadly elements. A mighty purification of the air will 
 be effected by Christ's coming.  Though sin will not be absolutely 
 abolished--for men will still be in the flesh
 (Isa 65:20)
 --sin will no longer be a universal power, for the flesh is not any 
 longer seduced by Satan. He will not be, as now, "the god and prince of 
 the world"--nor will the world "lie in the wicked one"--the flesh will 
 become ever more isolated and be overcome. Christ will reign with His 
 transfigured saints over men in the flesh [AUBERLEN]. This will be the manifestation of "the world 
 to come," which has been already set up invisibly in the saints, amidst 
 "this world"
 (2Co 4:4;
 Heb 2:5; 5:5). 
 The Jewish Rabbis thought, as the world was created in six days and on
 the seventh God rested, so there would be six millenary periods, 
 followed by a sabbatical millennium. Out of seven years every seventh 
 is the year of remission, so out of the seven thousand years of the 
 world the seventh millenary shall be the millenary of remission. A 
 tradition in the house of Elias, A.D. 200, states 
 that the world is to endure six thousand years; two thousand before the 
 law, two thousand under the law, and two thousand under Messiah. 
 Compare Note, see on
 Heb 4:9 
 
 and
 Heb 4:9,
 Margin; see on
 Re 14:13.
 PAPIAS, JUSTIN 
 MARTYR, IRENÆUS, and
 CYPRIAN, among the earliest Fathers, all held the
 doctrine of a millennial kingdom on earth; not till millennial views
 degenerated into gross carnalism was this doctrine abandoned.
 
      
 that he should deceive--so A. But B reads, "that he deceive"
 (Greek, "plana," for "planeesee").
 
      
 and--so Coptic and ANDREAS. But A, 
 B, and Vulgate omit "and."

      
 4, 5. they sat--the twelve apostles, and the saints in general.
 
      
 judgment was given unto there--(See on
 Da 7:22). 
 The office of judging was given to them. Though in one sense having to 
 stand before the judgment-seat of Christ, yet in another sense they "do 
 not come into judgment (Greek), but have already passed from 
 death unto life."
 
      
 souls--This term is made a plea for denying the literality of 
 the first resurrection, as if the resurrection were the spiritual one 
 of the souls of believers in this life; the life and reign being 
 that of the soul raised in this life from the death of sin by vivifying 
 faith.  But "souls" expresses their disembodied state (compare
 Re 6:9)
 as John saw them at first; "and they lived" implies their coming to 
 life in the body again, so as to be visible, as the phrase,
 Re 20:5,
 "this is the first resurrection," proves; for as surely as "the rest of 
 the dead lived not (again) until," &c., refers to the bodily 
 general resurrection, so must the first resurrection refer to 
 the body. This also accords with
 1Co 15:23,
 "They that are Christ's at His coming." Compare
 Ps 49:11-15.
 
 From 
 
 Re 6:9,
 I infer that "souls" is here used in the strict sense of spirits 
 disembodied when first seen by John; though doubtless "souls" is 
 often used in general for persons, and even for dead 
 bodies.
 
      
 beheaded--literally, "smitten with an axe"; a Roman 
 punishment, though crucifixion, casting to beasts, and burning, were 
 the more common modes of execution. The guillotine in revolutionary 
 France was a revival of the mode of capital punishment of pagan 
 imperial Rome. Paul was beheaded, and no doubt shall share 
 the first resurrection, in accordance with his prayer that he 
 "might attain unto the resurrection from out of the rest of the dead" 
 (Greek, "exanastasis"). The above facts may account for 
 the specification of this particular kind of punishment.
 
      
 for . . . for--Greek, "for the sake of"; on 
 account of"; "because of."
 
      
 and which--Greek, "and the which." And prominent 
 among this class (the beheaded), such as did not worship the beast. So
 Re 1:7,
 Greek, "and the which," or "and such as," particularizes 
 prominently among the general class those that follow in the 
 description [TREGELLES]. The extent of the 
 first resurrection is not spoken of here. In
 1Co 15:23, 51;
 1Th 4:14 
 we find that all "in Christ" shall share in it. John himself was not
 "beheaded," yet who doubts but that he shall share in the first 
 resurrection? The martyrs are put first, because most like Jesus in 
 their sufferings and death, therefore nearest Him in their life and 
 reign; for Christ indirectly affirms there are relative degrees and 
 places of honor in His kingdom, the highest being for those who drink 
 his cup of suffering. Next shall be those who have not bowed to the 
 world power, but have looked to the things unseen and eternal.
 
      
 neither--"not yet."
 
      
 foreheads . . . hands--Greek, "forehead 
 . . . hand."
 
      
 reigned with Christ--over the earth.

      
 5. But--B, Coptic, and ANDREAS read, 
 "and." A and Vulgate omit it.
 
      
 again--A, B, Vulgate, Coptic, and 
 ANDREAS omit it. "Lived" is used for lived
 again, as in
 Re 2:8.
 John saw them not only when restored to life, but when in the act of 
 reviving [BENGEL].
 
      
 first resurrection--"the resurrection of the just." Earth is not 
 yet transfigured, and cannot therefore be the meet locality for the 
 transfigured Church; but from heaven the transfigured saints with 
 Christ rule the earth, there being a much freer communion of the 
 heavenly and earthly churches (a type of which state may be seen in the 
 forty days of the risen Saviour during which He appeared to His 
 disciples), and they know no higher joy than to lead their brethren on 
 earth to the same salvation and glory as they share themselves. The 
 millennial reign on earth does not rest on an isolated passage of the 
 Apocalypse, but all Old Testament prophecy goes on the same view 
 (compare
 Isa 4:3; 11:9; 35:8).
 Jesus, while opposing the carnal views of the kingdom of God prevalent
 among the Jews in His day, does not contradict, but confirms, the Old 
 Testament view of a coming, earthly, Jewish kingdom of glory: beginning 
 from within, and spreading itself now spiritually, the kingdom of God 
 shall manifest itself outwardly at Christ's coming again. The papacy is 
 a false anticipation of the kingdom during the Church-historical 
 period. "When Christianity became a worldly power under Constantine, 
 the hope of the future was weakened by the joy over present success" 
 [BENGEL]. Becoming a harlot, the Church ceased to 
 be a bride going to meet her Bridegroom; thus millennial hopes 
 disappeared. The rights which Rome as a harlot usurped, shall be 
 exercised in holiness by the Bride. They are "kings" because they are 
 "priests"
 (Re 20:6;
 Re 1:6; 5:10); 
 their priesthood unto God and Christ
 (Re 7:15)
 is the ground of their kingship in relation to man. Men will be willing 
 subjects of the transfigured priest-kings, in the day of the Lord's 
 power. Their power is that of attraction, winning the heart, and not 
 counteracted by devil or beast. Church and State shall then be 
 co-extensive. Man created "to have dominion over earth" is to rejoice 
 over his world with unmixed, holy joy. John tells us that, 
 instead of the devil, the transfigured Church of Christ; Daniel, that 
 instead of the heathen beast, the holy Israel, shall rule the world 
 [AUBERLEN].

      
 6. Blessed--(Compare
 Re 14:13; 19:9).
 
      
 on such the second death hath no power--even as it has none on 
 Christ now that He is risen.
 
      
 priests of God--Apostate Christendom being destroyed, and the 
 believing Church translated at Christ's coming, there will remain 
 Israel and the heathen world, constituting the majority of men then 
 alive, which, from not having come into close contact with the Gospel, 
 have not incurred the guilt of rejecting it. These will be the subjects 
 of a general conversion
 (Re 11:15).
 "The veil" shall be taken off Israel first, then from off "all people." 
 The glorious events attending Christ's appearing, the destruction of 
 Antichrist, the transfiguration of the Church, and the binding of 
 Satan, will prepare the nations for embracing the Gospel. As 
 individual regeneration goes on now, so there shall be a 
 "regeneration" of nations then. Israel, as a nation, shall be 
 "born at once--in one day." As the Church began at Christ's 
 ascension, so the kingdom shall begin at His second advent. This 
 is the humiliation of the modern civilized nations, that nations which 
 they despise most, Jews and uncivilized barbarians, the negro 
 descendants of Ham who from the curse of Noah have been so backward, 
 Cush and Sheba, shall supplant and surpass them as centers of the 
 world's history (compare
 De 32:21;
 Ro 10:19; 11:20, 
 &c.). The Jews are our teachers even in New Testament times. Since 
 their rejection revelation has been silent. The whole Bible, even the 
 New Testament, is written by Jews. If revelation is to recommence in 
 the millennial kingdom, converted Israel must stand at the head of 
 humanity. In a religious point of view, Jews and Gentiles stand on an 
 equal footing as both alike needing mercy; but as regards God's 
 instrumentalities for bringing about His kingdom on earth, Israel is 
 His chosen people for executing His plans. The Israelite priest-kings 
 on earth are what the transfigured priest-kings are in heaven. There 
 shall be a blessed chain of giving and receiving--God, Christ, the 
 transfigured Bride the Church, Israel, the world of nations. A new time 
 of revelation will begin by the outpouring of the fulness of the 
 Spirit. Ezekiel (the fortieth through forty-eighth chapters), himself 
 son of a priest, sets forth the priestly character of Israel; Daniel 
 the statesman, its kingly character; Jeremiah
 (Jer 33:17-21),
 both its priestly and kingly character. In the Old Testament the whole 
 Jewish national life was religious only in an external legal manner. 
 The New Testament Church insists on inward renewal, but leaves its 
 outward manifestations free. But in the millennial kingdom, all spheres 
 of life shall be truly Christianized from within outwardly. The Mosaic 
 ceremonial law corresponds to Israel's priestly office; the civil law 
 to its kingly office: the Gentile Church adopts the moral law, and 
 exercises the prophetic office by the word working inwardly. But when 
 the royal and the priestly office shall be revived, then--the 
 principles of the Epistle to the Hebrews remaining the same--also the 
 ceremonial and civil law of Moses will develop its spiritual depths in 
 the divine worship (compare
 Mt 5:17-19).
 At present is the time of preaching; but then the time of the 
 Liturgy of converted souls forming "the great congregation" 
 shall come. Then shall our present defective governments give place to 
 perfect governments in both Church and State. Whereas under the Old 
 Testament the Jews exclusively, and in the New Testament the Gentiles 
 exclusively, enjoy the revelation of salvation (in both cases humanity 
 being divided and separated), in the millennium both Jews and Gentiles 
 are united, and the whole organism of mankind under the first-born 
 brother, Israel, walks in the light of God, and the full life of 
 humanity is at last realized. Scripture does not view the human race as 
 an aggregate of individuals and nationalities, but as an organic whole, 
 laid down once for all in the first pages of revelation.
 (Ge 9:25-27; 10:1, 5, 18, 25, 32;
 De 32:8 
 recognizes the fact that from the first the division of the nations was
 made with a relation to Israel). Hence arises the importance of the Old 
 Testament to the Church now as ever. Three grand groups of nations, 
 Hamites, Japhetites, and Shemites, correspond respectively to the three 
 fundamental elements in man--body, soul, and spirit. The flower of 
 Shem, the representative of spiritual life, is Israel, even as 
 the flower of Israel is He in whom all mankind is summed up, the second 
 Adam
 (Ge 12:1-3).
 Thus Israel is the mediator of divine revelations for all times. Even 
 nature and the animal world will share in the millennial blessedness. 
 As sin loses its power, decay and death will decrease [AUBERLEN]. Earthly and heavenly glories shall be united 
 in the twofold election. Elect Israel in the flesh shall stand at the 
 head of the earthly, the elect spiritual Church, the Bride, in the 
 heavenly. These twofold elections are not merely for the good of the 
 elect themselves, but for the good of those to whom they minister. The 
 heavenly Church is elected not merely to salvation, but to rule in 
 love, and minister blessings over the whole earth, as king-priests. The 
 glory of the transfigured saints shall be felt by men in the flesh with 
 the same consciousness of blessing as on the Mount of Transfiguration 
 the three disciples experienced in witnessing the glory of Jesus, and 
 of Moses and Elias, when Peter exclaimed, "It is good for us to be 
 here"; in
 2Pe 1:16-18,
 the Transfiguration is regarded as the earnest of Christ's coming in 
 glory.  The privilege of "our high calling in Christ" is limited 
 to the present time of Satan's reign; when he is bound, there will be 
 no scope for suffering for, and so afterwards reigning with, Him
 (Re 3:21;
 compare Note, see on
 1Co 6:2). 
 Moreover, none can be saved in the present age and in the pale of the 
 Christian Church who does not also reign with Christ hereafter, the 
 necessary preliminary to which is suffering with Christ now. If we fail 
 to lay hold of the crown, we lose all, "the gift of grace as 
 well as the reward of service" [DE BURGH].

7. expired--Greek, "finished."

      
 8. Gog and Magog--
 (Eze 38:1-39:29;
 
 see on
 Eze 38:2). 
 Magog is a general name for northern nations of Japheth's posterity, 
 whose ideal head is Gog
 (Ge 10:2).
 A has but one Greek article to "Gog and Magog," whereby the two, 
 namely, the prince and the people, are marked as having the closest 
 connection.  B reads the second article before Magog wrongly. HILLER [Onomasticon] explains both words as 
 signifying "lofty," "elevated." For "quarters" the Greek is 
 "corners."
 
      
 to battle--Greek, "to the war," in A and B. But
 ANDREAS omits "the."

      
 9. on the breadth of the earth--so as completely to overspread 
 it.  Perhaps we ought to translate, ". . . of the [holy] 
 land."
 
      
 the camp of the saints and the beloved city--the camp of the
 saints encircling the beloved city, Jerusalem 
 
 (Ecclesiasticus 24:11).  
 
 Contrast "hateful" in Babylon
 (Re 18:2;
 De 32:15, 
 Septuagint).  Ezekiel's prophecy of Gog and Magog
 (Eze 38:1-39:29)
 refers to the attack made by Antichrist on Israel before the 
 millennium: but this attack is made after the millennium, so 
 that "Gog and Magog" are mystical names representing the final 
 adversaries led by Satan in person. Ezekiel's Gog and Magog come from 
 the north, but those here come "from the four corners of the 
 earth." Gog is by some connected with a Hebrew root, 
 "covered."
 
      
 from God--so B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and
 ANDREAS. But A omits the words. Even during the
 millennium there is a separation between heaven and earth, transfigured 
 humanity and humanity in the flesh. Hence it is possible that an 
 apostasy should take place at its close. In the judgment on this 
 apostasy the world of nature is destroyed and renewed, as the world of 
 history was before the millennial kingdom; it is only then that the new 
 heaven and new earth are realized in final perfection.  The 
 millennial new heaven and earth are but a foretaste of this 
 everlasting state when the upper and lower congregations shall be no 
 longer separate, though connected as in the millennium, and when new 
 Jerusalem shall descend from God out of heaven. The inherited 
 sinfulness of our nature shall be the only influence during the 
 millennium to prevent the power of the transfigured Church saving all 
 souls. When this time of grace shall end, no other shall succeed. For 
 what can move him in whom the visible glory of the Church, while the 
 influence of evil is restrained, evokes no longing for communion with 
 the Church's King? As the history of the world of nations ended with 
 the manifestation of the Church in visible glory, so that of mankind in 
 general shall end with the great separation of the just from the wicked
 (Re 20:12)
 
 [AUBERLEN].

      
 10. that deceived--Greek, "that deceiveth."
 
      
 lake of fire--his final doom: as "the bottomless pit" 
 (Re 20:1)
 
 was his temporary prison.
 
      
 where--so Coptic. But A, B, Vulgate, and 
 Syriac read, "where also."
 
      
 the beast and the false prophet are--
 (Re 19:20).
 
      
 day and night--figurative for without intermission 
 (Re 22:5),
 such as now is caused by night interposing between day and day. The 
 same phrase is used of the external state of the blessed
 (Re 4:8).
 As the bliss of these is eternal, so the woe of Satan and the lost must 
 be. As the beast and the false prophet led the former conspiracy 
 against Christ and His people, so Satan in person heads the last 
 conspiracy. Satan shall not be permitted to enter this Paradise 
 regained, to show the perfect security of believers, unlike the first 
 Adam whom Satan succeeded in robbing of Paradise; and shall, like 
 Pharaoh at the Rod Sea, receive in this last attempt his final doom.
 
      
 for ever and ever--Greek, "to the ages of the ages."

      
 11. great--in contrast to the "thrones,"
 Re 20:4.
 
      
 white--the emblem of purity and justice.
 
      
 him that sat on it--the Father [ALFORD]. 
 Rather, the Son, to whom "the Father hath committed all judgment." God 
 in Christ, that is, the Father represented by the Son, is He before 
 whose judgment-seat we must all stand. The Son's mediatorial reign is 
 with a view to prepare the kingdom for the Father's acceptance. When He 
 has done that, He shall give it up to the Father, "that God may be all 
 in all," coming into direct communion with His creatures, without 
 intervention of a Mediator, for the first time since the fall. 
 Heretofore Christ's Prophetical mediation had been prominent in 
 His earthly ministry, His Priestly mediation is prominent now in heaven 
 between His first and second advents, and His Kingly shall be so during 
 the millennium and at the general judgment.
 
      
 earth and heaven fled away--The final conflagration, therefore,
 precedes the general judgment. This is followed by the new heaven and
 earth 
 (Re 21:1-27).

      
 12. the dead--"the rest of the dead" who did not share the first
 resurrection, and those who died during the millennium.
 
      
 small and great--B has "the small and the great." 
 A, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS have "the 
 great and the small." The wicked who had died from the time of Adam to 
 Christ's second advent, and all the righteous and wicked who had died 
 during and after the millennium, shall then have their eternal portion 
 assigned to them. The godly who were transfigured and reigned with 
 Christ during it, shall also be present, not indeed to have their 
 portion assigned as if for the first time (for that shall have been 
 fixed long before,
 Joh 5:24),
 but to have it confirmed for ever, and that God's righteousness 
 may be vindicated in the case of both the saved and the lost, in the 
 presence of an assembled universe. Compare "We must ALL appear," &c.
 Ro 14:10;
 2Co 5:10. 
 The saints having been first pronounced just themselves by Christ out
 of "the book of life," shall sit as assessors of the Judge. Compare
 Mt 25:31, 32, 40,
 "these My brethren." God's omniscience will not allow the most 
 insignificant to escape unobserved, and His omnipotence will cause the 
 mightiest to obey the summons. The living are not specially 
 mentioned: as these all shall probably first (before the destruction of 
 the ungodly,
 Re 20:9)
 be transfigured, and caught up with the saints long previously 
 transfigured; and though present for the confirmation of their 
 justification by the Judge, shall not then first have their eternal 
 state assigned to them, but shall sit as assessors with the Judge.
 
      
 the books . . . opened--
 (Da 7:10).
 The books of God's remembrance, alike of the evil and the good
 (Ps 56:8; 139:4;
 Mal 3:16): 
 
 conscience
 (Ro 2:15, 16),
 
 the word of Christ 
 
 (Joh 12:48),
 
 the law
 (Ga 3:10),
 
 God's eternal counsel 
 
 (Ps 139:16).
 
      
 book of life--
 (Re 3:5;
 13:8; 21:27;
 Ex 32:32, 33; 
 Ps 69:28; 
 Da 12:1; 
 Php 4:3). 
 Besides the general book recording the works of all, there is a special
 book for believers in which their names are written, not for their 
 works, but for the work of Christ for, and in, them. 
 Therefore it is called, "the Lamb's book of life." Electing 
 grace has singled them out from the general mass.
 
      
 according to their works--We are justified by faith, but 
 judged according to (not by) our works. For the general 
 judgment is primarily designed for the final vindication of God's 
 righteousness before the whole world, which in this checkered 
 dispensation of good and evil, though really ruling the world, has been 
 for the time less manifest. Faith is appreciable by God and the 
 believer alone
 (Re 2:17).
 But works are appreciable by all.  These, then, are made the 
 evidential test to decide men's eternal state, thus showing that God's 
 administration of judgment is altogether righteous.

13. death and hell--Greek, "Hades." The essential identity of the dying and risen body is hereby shown; for the sea and grave give up their dead. The body that sinned or served God shall, in righteous retribution, be the body also that shall suffer or be rewarded. The "sea" may have a symbolical [CLUVER from AUGUSTINE], besides the literal meaning, as, in Re 8:8; 12:12; 13:1; 18:17, 19; so "death" and "hell" are personifications (compare Re 21:1). But the literal sense need hardly be departed from: all the different regions wherein the bodies and souls of men had been, gave them up.

      
 14. Death and Hades, as personified representatives of the 
 enemies of Christ' and His Church, are said to be cast into the lake of 
 fire to express the truth that Christ and His people shall never more 
 die, or be in the state of disembodied spirits.
 
      
 This is the second death--"the lake of fire" is added in A, B, 
 and ANDREAS. English Version, which omits 
 the clause, rests on inferior manuscripts. In hell the ancient form of 
 death, which was one of the enemies destroyed by Christ, shall not 
 continue, but a death of a far different kind reigns there, 
 "everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord": an 
 abiding testimony of the victory of Christ.

15. The blissful lot of the righteous is not here specially mentioned as their bliss had commenced before the final judgment. Compare, however, Mt 25:34, 41, 46.



 The Third Vision, Religious and Commercial Babylon, The Great White Throne Judgment, The New Heaven and Earth
The Third Vision, Religious and Commercial Babylon, The Great White Throne Judgment, The New Heaven and Earth
Re 20:1-15. SATAN BOUND, AND THE FIRST-RISEN SAINTS REIGN WITH CHRIST, A THOUSAND YEARS; SATAN LOOSED, GATHERS THE NATIONS, GOG AND MAGOG, ROUND THE CAMP OF THE SAINTS, AND IS FINALLY CONSIGNED TO THE LAKE OF FIRE; THE GENERAL RESURRECTION AND LAST JUDGMENT.
1. The destruction of his representatives, the beast and the false prophet, to whom he had given his power, throne, and authority, is followed by the binding of Satan himself for a thousand years.
the key of the bottomless pit--now transferred from Satan's hands, who had heretofore been permitted by God to use it in letting loose plagues on the earth; he is now to be made to feel himself the torment which he had inflicted on men, but his full torment is not until he is cast into "the lake of fire" (Re 20:10).