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The epistle to the Church at Ephesus. Verse
1. Unto the angel of the Church of
Ephesus By (οις ),
, angel, we are to
understand the messenger or person sent by God to
preside over this Church; and to him the epistle is directed,
not as pointing out his state, but the state of the Church
under his care. Angel of the Church here answers
exactly to that officer of the synagogue among the Jews called
sheliach tsibbur, the messenger of the Church,
whose business it was to read, pray, and teach
in the synagogue. The Church at Ephesus is first
addressed, as being the place where John chiefly resided; and
the city itself was the metropolis of that part of Asia. The
angel or bishop at this time was most probably Timothy,
who presided over that Church before St. John took up his
residence there, and who is supposed to have continued in that
office till A.D. 97, and to have been martyred a short time
before St. John's return from Patmos.
Holdeth the seven
stars Who particularly preserves, and
guides, and upholds, not only the ministers of those seven
Churches, but all the genuine ministers of his Gospel, in all
ages and places.
Walketh in the midst of the seven
golden candlesticks Is the supreme Bishop
and Head, not only of those Churches, but of all the Churches
or congregations of his people throughout the world.
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Verse
2. I know thy works For the
eyes of the Lord are throughout the earth, beholding the evil
and the good; and, being omnipresent, all things are
continually open and naked before him. It is worthy of remark,
that whatsoever is praiseworthy in any of these
Churches is first mentioned; thereby intimating that
God is more intent on finding out the good than the evil in
any person or Church; and that those who wish to reform such
as have fallen or are not making sufficient advances in the
Divine life, should take occasion, from the good which yet
remains, to encourage them to set out afresh for the kingdom
of heaven. The fallen or backsliding who have any tenderness
of conscience left are easily discouraged, and are apt to
think that there is no seed left from which any harvest can be
reasonably expected. Let such be told that there is still a
seed of godliness remaining, and that it requires only
watching and strengthening the things which remain, by
prompt application to God through Christ, in order to bring
them back to the full enjoyment of all they have lost, and to
renew them in the spirit of their mind. Ministers continually
harping on Ye are dead, ye are dead; there is little or
no Christianity among you, spread desolation and
death wheresoever they go. It is far better to say, in such
cases, "Ye have lost ground, but ye have not lost
all your ground; ye might have been much farther
advanced, but through mercy ye are still in the way.
The Spirit of God is grieved by you, but it is evident he has
not forsaken you. Ye have not walked in the light as ye
should, but your candlestick is not yet removed, and still the
light shines. Ye have not much zeal, but ye have a
little. In short, God still strives with you, still
loves you, still waits to be gracious to you; take courage,
set out afresh, come to God through Christ; believe, love,
obey, and you will soon find days more blessed than you have
ever yet experienced." Exhortations and encouragements of this
kind are sure to produce the most blessed effects; and under
such the work of God infallibly revives.
And thy labour
He knew their works in general. Though they had
left their first love, yet still they had so much love
as excited them to labour, and enabled them to
bear persecution patiently, and to keep the
faith; for they could not tolerate evil men, and they
had put fictitious apostles to the test, and had
found them to be liars, pretending a Divine commission
while they had none, and teaching false doctrines as if they
were the truths of God.
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Verse
3. And hast borne The same
things mentioned in the preceding verse, but in an
inverted order, the particular reason of which does not
appear; perhaps it was intended to show more forcibly
to this Church that there was no good which they had done, nor
evil which they had suffered, that was forgotten before God.
And hast not
fainted. They must therefore have had a
considerable portion of this love remaining, else they could
not have thus acted.
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Verse
4. Nevertheless I have somewhat against
thee The clause should be read, according
to the Greek, thus: But I have against thee that
thou hast left thy first love. They did not retain that
strong and ardent affection for God and sacred things which
they had when first brought to the knowledge of the truth, and
justified by faith in Christ.
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Verse
5. Remember Consider the
state of grace in which you once stood; the happiness, love,
and joy which you felt when ye received remission of sins; the
zeal ye had for God's glory and the salvation of mankind; your
willing, obedient spirit, your cheerful self-denial, your
fervour in private prayer, your detachment from the world, and
your heavenly-mindedness. Remember-consider, all these.
Whence thou art
fallen Fallen from all those blessed
dispositions and gracious feelings already mentioned. Or,
remember what a loss you have sustained; for so
(οις ),
is frequently used by the best Greek writers.
Repent Be
deeply humbled before God for having so carelessly guarded the
Divine treasure.
Do the first works
Resume your former zeal and diligence; watch, fast, pray,
reprove sin, carefully attend all the ordinances of God, walk
as in his sight, and rest not till you have recovered all your
lost ground, and got back the evidence of your acceptance with
your Maker.
I will come unto thee
quickly In the way of judgment.
And will remove thy
candlestick Take away my ordinances, remove
your ministers, and send you a famine of the word. As there is
here an allusion to the candlestick in the tabernacle and
temple, which could not be removed without suspending the
whole Levitical service, so the threatening here intimates
that, if they did not repent, unchurch them; they
should no longer have a pastor, no longer have the word and
sacraments, and no longer have the presence of the Lord Jesus.
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Verse
6. The deeds of the Nicolaitanes
These were, as is commonly supposed, a sect of the
Gnostics, who taught the most impure doctrines, and
followed the most impure practices. They are also supposed to
have derived their origin from Nicolas, one of the seven
deacons mentioned Acts
6:5, where see the note. The Nicolaitanes taught
the community of wives, that adultery and fornication were
things indifferent, that eating meats offered to idols was
quite lawful; and mixed several pagan rites with the Christian
ceremonies. Augustine, Irenaeus, Clemens Alexandrinus, and
Tertullian, have spoken largely concerning them. See more in
my preface to 2d Peter, where are several particulars
concerning these heretics.
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Verse
7. He that hath an ear Let
every intelligent person, and every Christian man, attend
carefully to what the Holy Spirit, in this and the following
epistles, says to the Churches. See Clarke on Matthew
11:15. where the same form of speech occurs.
To him that
overcometh To him who continues steadfast
in the faith, and uncorrupt in his life; who faithfully
confesses Jesus, and neither imbibes the doctrines nor is led
away by the error of the wicked; will I give to eat of the
tree of life. As he who conquered his enemies had,
generally, not only great honour, but also a
reward; so here a great reward is promised (οις ),
,
to the conqueror: and as in the Grecian games,
to which there may be an allusion, the conqueror was crowned
with the leaves of some tree; here it is promised that
they should eat of the fruit of the tree of life,
which is in the midst of the paradise of God; that is,
that they should have a happy and glorious immortality. There
is also here an allusion to Genesis
2:9, where it is said, God made the tree of life to
grow out of the midst of the garden; and it is very
likely that by eating the fruit of this tree the immortality
of Adam was secured, and on this it was made dependent. When
Adam transgressed, he was expelled from this garden, and no
more permitted to eat of the tree of life; hence he became
necessarily mortal. This tree, in all its sacramental effects,
is secured and restored to man by the incarnation, death, and
resurrection of Christ. The tree of life is frequently
spoken of by the rabbins; and by it they generally mean the
immortality of the soul, and a final state of blessedness. See
many examples in Schoettgen. They talk also of a
celestial and terrestrial paradise. The
former, they say, "is for the reception of the souls of the
just perfect; and differs as much from the earthly
paradise as light from darkness."
The Epistle to the Church at Smyrna. Verse
8. Unto the angel This was
probably the famous Polycarp. See below.
These things saith the first and
the last He who is eternal; from
whom all things come, and to whom all things must return.
Which was dead, for the redemption of the world; and
is alive to die no more for ever, his glorified humanity
being enthroned at the Father's right hand.
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Verse 9. I know thy
works As he had spoken to the preceding
Church, so he speaks to this: I know all that ye have
done, and all that ye have suffered. The
tribulation here mentioned must mean persecution,
either from the Jews, the heathens, or from the heretics, who,
because of their flesh-pampering doctrines might have had many
partisans at Smyrna.
And poverty
Stripped probably of all their temporal possessions,
because of their attachment to the Gospel.
But thou art rich
Rich in faith, and heir of the kingdom of Christ.
The blasphemy of them which say
they are Jews There were persons there who
professed Judaism, and had a synagogue in the place,
and professed to worship the true God; but they had no genuine
religion, and they served the devil rather than God. They
applied a sacred name to an unholy thing: and this is one
meaning of the word blasphemy in this book.
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Verse 10. Fear none of those things
which thou shalt suffer This may be
addressed particularly to Polycarp, if he was at that
time the bishop of this Church. He had much to suffer; and was
at last burnt alive at Smyrna, about the year of our Lord 166.
We have a very ancient account of his martyrdom, which has
been translated by Cave, and is worthy of the reader's
perusal. That account states that the Jews were
particularly active in this martyrdom, and brought the fagots,
Such persons must indeed have been of the synagogue of
Satan.
Ten days As the
days in this book are what is commonly called
prophetic days, each answering to a year, the
ten years of tribulation may denote ten years of
persecution; and this was precisely the duration of the
persecution under Diocletian, during which all the
Asiatic Churches were grievously afflicted. Others understand
the expression as implying frequency and
abundance, as it does in other parts of Scripture. Genesis
31:7,41: Thou hast changed my wages TEN TIMES; i.e.
thou hast frequent?y changed my wages Numbers
14:22: Those men have tempted me now these TEN
TIMES; i.e. they have frequently and grievously
tempted and sinned against me. Nehemiah
4:12: The Jews that dwelt by them came and said unto us
TEN TIMES, i.e. they were frequently coming and
informing us, that our adversaries intended to attack us, Job
19:3; These TEN TIMES have ye reproached me; i.e.
ye have loaded me with continual reproaches. Daniel
1:20: In all matters of wisdom, he found them TEN TIMES
better than all the magicians; i.e. the king
frequently consulted Daniel and his companions, and found them
more abundantly informed and wise than all his
counsellors.
Some think the shortness of the affliction is here
intended, and that the ten days are to be understood as in
Terence, Heaut., Act v., scen. 1, ver. 36, Decem
dierum vis mi est familia. "I have enjoyed my family but a
short time."
Be thou faithful unto
death Be firm, hold fast the faith, confess
Christ to the last, and at all hazards, and thou shalt have
a crown of life-thou shalt be crowned with life, have
an eternal happy existence, though thou suffer a temporal
death. It is said of Polycarp that when brought before
the judge, and commanded to abjure and blaspheme Christ, he
firmly answered, "Eighty and six years have I served him, and
he never did me wrong, how then can I blaspheme my king who
hath saved me?" He was then adjudged to the flames, and
suffered cheerfully for Christ his Lord and Master.
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Verse 11. He that
overcometh The conqueror who has
stood firm in every trial, and vanquished all his adversaries.
Shall not be hurt of the second
death. That is, an eternal separation from
God and the glory of his power; as what we commonly mean by
final perdition. This is another rabbinical mode of
speech in very frequent use, and by it they understand the
punishment of hell in a future life.
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The Epistle to the Church at Pergamos. Verse
12. The angel of the Church in
Pergamos See the description of this place,
Revelation
1:11.
Which hath the sharp
sword See Cla?ke on Revelation
1:16. The sword of the Spirit, which is the word of
God, cuts every way; it convinces of sin, righteousness,
and judgment; pierces between the joints and the marrow,
divides between the soul and spirit, dissects the whole mind,
and exhibits a regular anatomy of the soul. It not only
reproves and exposes sin, but it slays the ungodly, pointing
out and determining the punishment they shall endure. Jesus
has the sword with the two edges, because he is the Saviour of
sinners, and the Judge of quick and dead.
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Verse 13. Where Satan's seat
is (οις ),
Where Satan has
his throne-where he reigns as king, and is
universally obeyed. It was a maxim among the Jews, that where
the law of God was not studied, there Satan dwelt; but
he was obliged to leave the place where a synagogue or academy
was established.
Thou holdest fast my
name Notwithstanding that the profession of
Christianity exposed this Church to the bitterest
persecution, they held fast the name of Christian,
which they had received from Jesus Christ, and did not deny
his faith; for when brought to the trial they openly
professed themselves disciples and followers of their Lord and
Master.
Antipas was my faithful
martyr Who this Antipas was we
cannot tell. We only know that he was a Christian, and
probably bore some office in the Church, and became
illustrious by his martyrdom in the cause of Christ. There is
a work extant called The Acts of Antipas, which
makes him bishop of Pergamos, and states that he was put to
death by being enclosed in a burning brazen bull. But this
story confutes itself, as the Romans, under whose government
Pergamos then was, never put any person to death in this way.
It is supposed that he was murdered by some mob, who chose
this way to vindicate the honour of their god
AEsculapius, in opposition to the claims of our Lord
Jesus.
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Verse 14. I have a few things
against thee Their good deeds are
first carefully sought out and commended; what was
wrong in them is touched with a gentle but effectual
hand.
The followers of Balaam, the Nicolaitanes, and the
Gnostics, were probably all the same kind of persons; but See
Clarke on Revelation
2:6. What the doctrine of Balaam was, see the notes on Numbers
24:1-25:18;; 31:1-54.
It appears that there were some then in the Church at Pergamos
who held eating things offered to idols in honour of those
idols, and fornication, indifferent things. They associated
with idolaters in the heathen temples, and partook with them
in their religious festivals.
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Verse 15. The doctrine of the
Nicolaitanes See Clarke on Revelation
2:6.
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Verse 16. Will fight against them
with the sword of my mouth. See Clarke on
Revelation
2:12. He now speaks for their edification and salvation;
but if they do not repent, he will shortly declare those
judgments which shall unavoidably fall upon them.
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Verse 17. The hidden
manna It was a constant tradition of the
Jews that the ark of the covenant, the tables of stone,
Aaron's rod, the holy anointing oil, and the pot of manna,
were hidden by King Josiah when Jerusalem was taken by
the Chaldeans; and that these shall all be restored in the
days of the Messiah. This manna was hidden, but
Christ promises to give it to him that is conqueror. Jesus is
the ark, the oil, the rod, the testimony, and the manna. He
who is partaker of his grace has all those things in their
spiritual meaning and perfection.
And will give him a white
stone I. It is supposed that by the white
stone is meant pardon or acquittance, and the
evidence of it; and that there is an allusion here to the
custom observed by judges in ancient times, who were
accustomed to give their suffrages by white and
black pebbles; those who gave the former were for
absolving the culprit, those who gave the latter were
for his condemnation. This is mentioned by Ovid, Metam.
lib. xv., ver. 41:
Mos erat antiquus, niveis atrisque lapillis, His damnare
reos, illis absolvere culpa. Nunc quoque sic lata est
sententia tristis.
"A custom was of old, and still remains, Which life or
death by suffrages ordains: White stones and
black within an urn are cast, The first
absolve, but fate is in the last." DRYDEN.
II. ?thers suppose there is an allusion here to conquerors
in the public games, who were not only conducted with great
pomp into the city to which they belonged, but had a white
stone given to them, with their name inscribed on
it; which badge entitled them, during their whole life, to
be maintained at the public expense. See Pind., Olymp.
vii. 159, and the Scholia there; and see the
collections in Wetstein, and Rosenmuller's note.
These were called tesserae among the Romans, and of
these there were several kinds.
1. Tesserae conviviales, which answered exactly to
our cards of invitation, or tickets of admission
to a public feast or banquet; when the person invited produced
his tessera he was admitted. The mention of the
hidden manna here may seem to intimate that there is a
reference to these convivial tesserae, whether given to
the victor in the public games, entitling him to be fed at the
public expense, or to a particular friend, inviting him to a
family meal or to a public banquet.
2. There were tesserae inscribed with different
kinds of things, such as provisions, garments, gold or silver
vessels, horses, mares, slaves, emperors among the crowd in
the theatres, and he that could snatched one; and on producing
it he received that, the name of which was inscribed on it.
But from Dio Cassius it appears that those
tesserae were small wooden balls, whereas the
tesserae in general were square, whence they had
their name, as having four sides, angles, or
corners. Illi (οις ),
, vel
vocabant figuram quamvis quadratam, quae quatuor
angulos haberet; and these were made of stone,
marble, bone, or ivory, lead, brass, or other
metal. See Pitiscus.
3. Tesserae frumentariae, or tickets to receive
grain in the public distributions of corn; the name of
the person who was to receive, and the quantum of
grain; being both inscribed on this badge or ticket.
Those who did not need this public provision for themselves
were permitted to sell their ticket, and the bearer was
entitled to the quantum of grain mentioned on it.
4. But the most remarkable of these instruments were the
tesserae hospitales, which were given as badges of
friendship and alliance, and on which some
device was engraved, as a testimony that a contract of
friendship had been made between the parties. A small oblong
square piece of wood, bone, stone, or ivory, was taken and
divided into two equal parts, on which each of the parties
wrote his own name, and then interchanged it with the other.
This was carefully preserved, and handed down even to
posterity in the same family; and by producing this when they
travelled, it gave a mutual claim to the bearers of kind
reception and hospitable entertainment at each other's houses.
It is to this custom that Plautus refers in his
POENULUS, act. v., scen. 2, ver. 80, in the interview between
Agorastocles, and his unknown uncle Hanno.
HANNO.-O mi popularis, salve! AGORASTOCLES.-Et tu edepol,
quisquis es. Et si quid opus est, quaeso, die atque impera,
Popularitatis caussa. HAN.-Habeo gratiam. Verum ego hic
hospitium habeo: Antidamae filium Quaero; commonstra, si
novisti, Agorastoclem. Ecquem adolescentem tu hic novisti
Agorastoclem? AGOR.-Siquidem tu Antidamarchi quaeris
adoptatitium, Ego sum ipsus, quem tu quaeris. HAN.---Hem! quid
ego audio? AGOR.-Antidamae gnatum me esse. HAN.-----si ita
est, tesseram Conferre si vis hospitalem, eccam
adtuli. AGOR.-Agedum huc ostende; est par probe: nam habeo
domi. HAN.-O mi hospes, salve multum! nam mihi tuus pater,
Pater tuus ergo, hospes Antidamas fuit. Haec mihi
hospitalis tessera cum illo fuit. AGOR.-Ergo hic apud
me hospitium tibi praebebitur. Nam haud repudio hospitium,
neque Carthaginem: Inde sum oriundus. HAN.--- Di dent tibi
omnes quae velis.
HANNO.-Hail, my countryman!
AGORASTOCLES.-I hail thee also, in the name of Pollux,
whosoever thou art. And if thou have need of any thing, speak,
I beseech thee; and thou shalt obtain what thou askest, for
civility's sake.
HANNO.-I thank thee, but I have a lodging here; I seek the
son of Antidamas. Tell me if thou knowest Agorastocles. Dost
thou know in this place the young Agorastocles?
AGORASTOCLES.-If thou seek the adopted son of
Antidamarchus, I am the person whom thou seekest.
HANNO.-Ha! What do I hear?
AGORASTOCLES.-Thou hearest that I am the son of
Antidamas.
HANNO.-If it be so, compare, if thou pleasest, the
hospitable tessera; here it is, I have brought
it with me.
AGORASTOCLES.-Come then, reach it hither: it is the exact
counterpart; I have the other at home.
HANNO.-O my friend, I am very glad to see thee, for thy
father was my friend; therefore Antidamas thy father was my
guest. I divided this hospitable tessera with him.
AGORASTOCLES.-Therefore, a lodging shall be provided for
thee with me; I reverence hospitality, and I love Carthage,
where I was born.
HANNO.-May all the gods grant thee whatsoever thou wishest!
The tessera taken in this sense, seems to have been
a kind of tally; and the two parts were compared
together to ascertain the truth. Now it is very probable that
St. John may allude to this; for on this mode of
interpretation every part of the verse is consistent. 1. The
word (οις ),
does not necessarily signify a stone of any
kind, but a suffrage, sentence, decisive vote; and in this
place seems answerable to the tessera. The tessera
which Hanno had, he tells us in his Punic language, was
inscribed with the image or name of his god. "Sigillum
hospitii mei est tabula sculpta, conjus
sculptura est Deus meus. This is the interpretation of the
Punic words at the beginning of the above 5th act of the
Poenulus, as given by Bochart. 2. The person who
held it had a right to entertainment in the house of him who
originally gave it; for it was in reference to this that the
friendly contract was made. 3. The names of the
contracting persons, or some device, were written on
the tessera, which commemorated the friendly contract; and as
the parts were interchanged, none could know
that name or device, or the reason of the
contract, but he who received it. 4. This, when
produced, gave the bearer a right to the offices of
hospitality; he was accommodated with food, lodging,
necessary; and to this the eating of the hidden manna
may refer.
But what does this mean in the language of Christ? 1. That
the person is taken into an intimate state of friendship with
him. 2. That this contract is witnessed to the party by some
especial token, sign, or seal, to which he may have recourse
to support his claim, and identify his person. This is
probably what is elsewhere called the earnest of the
Spirit; See Clarke on Ephesians
1:14. and the places there referred to. He then who has
received and retains the witness of the Spirit that he is
adopted into the heavenly family, may
humbly claim, in virtue of it, his support of the bread and
water of life; the hidden manna-every grace of the
Spirit of God; and the tree of life-immortality, or the
final glorification of his body and soul throughout eternity.
3. By this state of grace into which he is brought he acquires
a new name, the name of child of God; the
earnest of the Spirit, the tessera, which he has
received, shows him this new name. 4. And this name of child
of God no man can know or understand, but he who has
received the tessera or Divine witness. 5. As his
Friend and Redeemer may be found everywhere, because he fills
the heavens and the earth, everywhere he may, on retaining
this tessera, claim direction, succour, support, grace,
and glory; and therefore the privileges of him who overcometh
are the greatest and most glorious that can be imagined.
For a farther account of the tessera of the
ancients, as well as for engravings of several, see Graevii
Thesaur.; Pitisci Lexic.; and Poleni Supplement;
and the authors to whom these writers refer.
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The Epistle to the Church at Thyatira. Verse
18. These things saith the Son of
God See the notes on Revelation
1:14,15.
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Verse 19. I know thy
works And of these he first sets forth
their charity, (οις ),
, their love to God and
each other; and particularly to the poor and
distressed: and hence followed their faith,
(οις ),
, their fidelity, to the grace they had
received; and service, (οις ),
, and ministration;
properly pious and benevolent service to widows, orphans, and
the poor in general.
And thy patience
(οις ),
Thy perseverance under
afflictions and persecutions, and thy
continuance in well-doing. I put faith before
service according to the general consent of the best
MSS. and versions.
Thy works The
continued labour of love, and thorough obedience.
The last to be more than
the first. They not only retained
what they had received at first, but grew in
grace, and in the knowledge and love of Jesus Christ.
This is a rare thing in most Christian Churches: they
generally lose the power of religion, and rest in the forms of
worship; and it requires a powerful revival to bring
them to such a state that their last works shall be more than
their first.
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Verse 20. That woman
Jezebel There is an allusion here to the
history of Ahab and Jezebel, as given in 2 Kings
9:1-10:36; and although we do not know who this Jezebel
was, yet from the allusion we may take it for granted she was
a woman of power and influence in Thyatira, who corrupted the
true religion, and harassed the followers of God in that city,
as Jezebel did in Israel. Instead of that woman
Jezebel, (οις ),
, many excellent MSS., and
almost all the ancient versions, read (οις ),
THY WIFE Jezebel; which intimates, indeed asserts, that
this bad woman was the wife of the bishop of the Church, and
his criminality in suffering her was therefore the greater.
This reading Griesbach has received into the text. She called
herself a prophetess, i.e., set up for a teacher; taught the
Christians that fornication, and eating things offered to
idols, were matters of indifference, and thus they were
seduced from the truth. But it is probable that by
fornication here is meant idolatry merely, which
is often its meaning in the Scriptures. It is too gross to
suppose that the wife of the bishop of this Church could teach
fornication literally. The messenger or bishop of this Church,
probably her husband, suffered this: he had power to
have cast her and her party out of the Church, or, as his
wife, to have restrained her; but he did not do it, and
thus she had every opportunity of seducing the faithful. This
is what Christ had against the messenger of this
Church.
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Verse 21. I gave her space to
repent "This alludes to the history of
Jezebel. God first sent Elijah to Ahab to pronounce a severe
judgment upon him; upon which Ahab showed tokens of
repentance, and so God put off his punishment. By these means
the like punishment pronounced against Jezebel was also put
off. Thus God gave her time to repent, which she did
not, but instead of that seduced her sons to the same
sins. See 1 Kings
21:1-29. According to the Mosaical law, the punishment of
idolatrous seducers was not to be delayed at all, but God
sometimes showed mercy; and now much more under the Christian
dispensation, though that mercy is often abused, and thus
produces the contrary effect, as in the case of this Jezebel.
See Ecclesiastes
8:11.
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Verse 22. Behold, I will cast her
into a bed "This again alludes to the same
history. Ahaziah, son of Ahab and Jezebel, by his mother's ill
instruction and example, followed her ways. God punished him
by making him fall down, as is supposed, from the top of the
terrace over his house, and so to be bedridden for a long time
under great anguish, designing thereby to give him time to
repent; but when, instead of that, he sent to consult
Baalzebub, Elijah was sent to pronounce a final doom against
his impenitence. Thus the son of Jezebel, who had
committed idolatry with and by her advice, was long cast
into the bed of affliction, and not repenting, died: in
the same manner his brother Jehoram succeeded likewise. All
this while Jezebel had time and warning enough to
repent; and though she did not prevail with Jehoram to
continue in the idolatrous worship of Baal, yet she persisted
in her own way, notwithstanding God's warnings. The sacred
writer, therefore, here threatens the Gnostic Jezebel
to make that wherein she delighteth, as adulterers in the bed
of lust, to be the very place, occasion, and instrument, of
her greatest torment. So in Isaiah, the bed is made a
symbol of tribulation, and anguish of body and
mind. See Isaiah
28:20; ; Job
33:19.
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Verse 23. And I will kill her
children with death "That is, I will
certainly destroy her offspring and memory, and thereby ruin
her designs. Jezebel's two sons, being both kings were both
slain; and after that, all the seventy sons of Ahab; 10:1;)
in all which the hand of God was very visible. In the same
manner God predicts the destruction of the heretics and
heresies referred to; see Revelation
2:16. It should seem by the expression, I am he which
searcheth the reins and the hearts, that these heretics
lurked about, and sowed their pernicious doctrines
secretly. But our Saviour tells them that it was in
vain, for he had power to bring their deeds to light, having
that Divine power of searching into the Evilly and affections
of men; and hereby he would show both them and us that he is,
according to his title, The Son of God; and hath such
eyes to pry into their actions, that, like a fire, they
will search into every thing, and burn up the chaff which
cannot stand his trial; so that the depths of
Satan, mentioned in the next verse, to which this
alludes, (Christ assuming here this title purposely) shall
avail nothing to those who think by their secret craft to
undermine the Christian religion; he will not only bring to
light, but baffle all their evil intentions. See Revelation
17:9.
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Verse 24. But unto you I say, and
unto the rest "But unto the rest,
preferable to the common one, as it evidently shows that the
rest of the epistle wholly concerns the faithful, who have not
received the former doctrine of error. I will put upon you
none other burden is a commendation of the sound
part of the Church, that they have no need of any new
exhortation or charge to be given them, no new advice but to
persevere as usual. See Romans
15:14,15. The expression of burden is taken from
the history of Ahab, 2 Kings
9:25: The Lord laid this burden on him; a word
often used by the prophets to signify a prophecy threatening
heavy things to be suffered. See Clarke on Isaiah
13:1. and "Nu 4:19"." See Dodd's Notes.
It is worthy of remark that the Gnostics called their
doctrine the depths of God, and the depths of
Bythos, intimating that they contained the most
profound secrets of Divine wisdom. Christ here calls
them the depths of Satan, being master pieces of his
subtlety. Perhaps they thought them to be of God, while
all the time they were deceived by the devil.
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Verse 25. That which ye
have That is, the pure doctrine of the
Gospel, hold fast till I come-till I come to execute
the judgments which I have threatened.
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Verse 26. Power over the
nations Every witness of Christ has power
to confute and confound all the false doctrines and maxims of
the nations of the world, for Christianity shall at last rule
over all; the kingdom of Christ will come, and the kingdoms of
this world become the kingdoms of our God and of his Christ.
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Verse 27. He shall rule them with a
rod of iron He shall restrain vice by the
strictest administration of justice; and those who
finally despise the word and rebel shall be broken and
destroyed, so as never more to be able to make head against
the truth. This seems to refer to the heathen world;
and perhaps Constantine the Great may be intended, who, when
he overcame Licinius, became the instrument in God's hand of
destroying idolatry over the whole Roman empire; and it
was so effectually broken as to be ever after like the
fragments of an earthen vessel, of no use in
themselves, and incapable of being ever united to any good
purpose.
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Verse 28. And I will give him the
morning star. He shall have the brightest
and most glorious empire, next to that of Christ himself. And
it is certain that the Roman empire under Constantine the
Great was the brightest emblem of the latter day glory which
has ever yet been exhibited to the world. It is well known
that sun, moon, and stars are emblems, in
prophetic language, of empires, kingdoms, and
states. And as the morning star is that which
immediately precedes the rising of the sun, it probably here
intends an empire which should usher in the universal sway of
the kingdom of Christ.
Ever since the time of Constantine the light of true
religion has been increasingly diffused, and is shining more
and more unto the perfect day.
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Verse 29. He that hath an
ear Let every Christian pay the strictest
regard to these predictions of Christ; and let them have a
suitable influence on his heart and life.
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- Revelation 2:1.
Copyright Statement The Adam Clarke Commentary is a derivative
of an electronic edition prepared by GodRules.net.
Bibliography
Information Clarke, Adam.
"Commentary on Revelation 2". "The Adam Clarke
Commentary".
<http://www.studylight.org/com/acc/view.cgi?book=re&chapter=002>.
1832.
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