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Chapter 6
- What followed on the opening of the seven seals. The
opening of the first seal; the white horse,
1,2.
- The opening of the second seal; the red
horse, 3,4.
- The opening of the third seal; the
black horse and the famine, 5,6.
- The opening of
the fourth seal; the pale horse, 7,8.
- The
opening of the fifth seal; the souls of men under
the altar, 9-11.
- The opening of the sixth seal;
the earthquake, the darkening of the sun and
moon, and falling of the stars, 12-14.
- The terrible
consternation of the kings and great men of the
earth, 15-17.
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Verse
1. When the Lamb opened one of the
seals It is worthy of remark that the
opening of the seals is not merely a declaration of what God
will do, but is the exhibition of a purpose then accomplished;
for whenever the seal is opened, the sentence appears to be
executed. It is supposed that, from Revelation
6:1-11:19, the calamities which should fall on the enemies
of Christianity, and particularly the Jews, are pointed out
under various images, as well as the preservation of the
Christians under those calamities.
One of the four
beasts Probably that with the face of a
lion. See Revelation
4:7.
Come and see.
Attend to what is about to be exhibited. It is very likely
that all was exhibited before his eyes as in a scene,
and he saw every act represented which was to take
place, and all the persons and things which were
to be the chief actors.
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Verse
2. A white horse Supposed to
represent the Gospel system, and pointing out its
excellence, swiftness, and purity.
He that sat on him
Supposed to represent Jesus Christ.
A bow The
preaching of the Gospel, darting conviction into
the hearts of sinners.
A crown The
emblem of the kingdom which Christ is to establish on
earth.
Conquering, and to
conquer. Overcoming and confounding the
Jews first, and then the Gentiles; spreading
more and more the doctrine and influence of the cross over the
face of the earth.
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Verse
3. The second beast That
which had the face of an ox.
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4. Another horse-red The
emblem of war; perhaps also of severe
persecution, and the martyrdom of the saints.
Him that sat
thereon Same say, Christ; others,
Vespasian; others, the Roman armies; others,
Artabanus, king of the Parthians,
Take peace from the
earth To deprive Judea of all tranquillity.
They should kill one
another This was literally the case with
the Jews, while besieged by the Romans.
A great sword.
Great influence and success, producing terrible carnage.
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Verse
5. The third beast That which
had the face of a man.
A black horse
The emblem of famine. Some think that which took
place under Claudius. See Matthew
24:7; the same which was predicted by Agabus, Acts
11:28.
A pair of balances
To show that the scarcity would be such, that every
person must be put under an allowance.
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6. A measure of wheat for a penny
The chaenix here mentioned was a measure of
dry things; and although the capacity is not
exactly known, yet it is generally agreed that it contained as
much as one man could consume in a day; and a penny,
the Roman denarius, was the ordinary pay of a labourer.
So it appears that in this scarcity each might be able to
obtain a bare subsistence by his daily labour; but a man could
not, in such cases, provide for a family.
Three measures of
barley This seems to have been the
proportion of value between the wheat and the
barley. Barley was allowed to afford a poor aliment, and was
given to the Roman soldiers instead of wheat, by way of
punishment.
Hurt not the oil and the
wine. Be sparing of these: use them not as
delicacies, but for necessity; because neither
the vines nor the olives will be productive.
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7. The fourth beast That
which had the face of an eagle.
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8. A pale horse The symbol of
death. Pallida mors, pale death, was a
very usual poetic epithet; of this symbol there can be no
doubt, because it is immediately said, His name that sat
on him was DEATH.
And hell followed with
him The grave, or state of the
dead, received the slain. This is a very elegant
prosopopaeia, or personification.
Over the fourth part of the
earth One fourth of mankind was to feel the
desolating effects of this seal.
To kill with sword
WAR; with hunger-FAMINE; with
death-PESTILENCE; and with the beasts of the
earth-lions, tigers, hyaenas, devastations occasioned by
war, famine, and pestilence.
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9. The fifth seal There is no
animal nor any other being to introduce this
seal, nor does there appear to be any new event predicted; but
the whole is intended to comfort the followers of God under
their persecutions, and to encourage them to bear up under
their distresses.
I saw under the
altar A symbolical vision was exhibited, in
which he saw an altar; and under it the souls of
those who had been slain for the word of
God-martyred for their attachment to Christianity, are
represented as being newly slain as victims to idolatry and
superstition. The altar is upon earth, not in heaven.
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Verse 10. And they cried with a loud
voice That is, their blood, like
that of Abel, cried for vengeance; for we are not to suppose
that there was any thing like a vindictive spirit in those
happy and holy souls who had shed their blood for the
testimony of Jesus. We sometimes say Blood cries for
blood; that is, in the order of Divine justice, every
murderer, and every murdering persecutor, shall be punished.
O Lord
(οις ),
Sovereign Lord, supreme Ruler; one having and
exercising unlimited and uncontrolled authority.
Holy In thy own
nature, hating iniquity;
And true In all
thy promises and threatenings;
Dost thou not judge
The persecutors;
And avenge our
blood Inflict signal punishment;
On them that dwell on the
earth? Probably meaning the persecuting
Jews; they dwelt (οις ),
upon that land, a
form of speech by which Judea is often signified in the
New Testament.
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Verse 11. White robes
The emblems of purity, innocence, and triumph.
They should rest yet for a little
season This is a declaration that, when the
cup of the iniquity of the Jews should be full, they should
then be punished in a mass. They were determined to proceed
farther, and God permits them so to do; reserving the fulness
of their punishment till they had filled up the measure of
their iniquity. If this book was written before the
destruction of Jerusalem, as is most likely, then this
destruction is that which was to fall upon the Jews;
and the little time or season was that which
elapsed between their martyrdom, or the date of this book, and
the final destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, under
Vespasian and his son Titus, about A.D. 70. What follows may
refer to the destruction of the heathen Roman empire.
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Verse 12. The sixth
seal This seal also is opened and
introduced by Jesus Christ alone.
A great earthquake
A most stupendous change in the civil and religious
constitution of the world. If it refer to Constantine the
Great, the change that was made by his conversion to
Christianity might be very properly represented under the
emblem of an earthquake, and the other symbols
mentioned in this and the following verses.
The sun-the ancient pagan government of the
Roman empire, was totally darkened; and, like a black hair
sackcloth, was degraded and humbled to the dust.
The moon-the ecclesiastical state of the same
empire, became as blood-was totally ruined, their
sacred rites abrogated, their priests and religious
institutions desecrated, their altars cast down, their temples
destroyed, or turned into places for Christian worship.
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Verse 13. The stars of
heaven The gods and goddesses, demi-gods,
and deified heroes, of their poetical and mythological
heaven, were prostrated indiscriminately, and lay as
useless as the figs or fruit of a tree shaken down before ripe
by a tempestuous wind.
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Verse 14. And the heaven departed as
a scroll The whole system of pagan and
idolatrous worship, with all its spiritual, secular, and
superstitious influence, was blasted, shrivelled up, and
rendered null and void, as a parchment scroll when exposed to
the action of a strong fire.
And every mountain
All the props, supports, and dependencies of the empire,
whether regal allies, tributary kings, dependent
colonies, or mercenary troops, were all moved out of
their places, so as to stand no longer in the same
relation to that empire, and its worship, support, and
maintenance, as they formerly did.
And island The
heathen temples, with their precincts and
enclosures, cut off from the common people, and into
which none could come but the privileged, may be here
represented by islands, for the same reasons.
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Verse 15.
The kings of the earth, who had endeavoured to support
the pagan worship by authority, influence, riches, political
wisdom, and military skill; with every bondman-all
slaves, who were in life and limb addicted to their
masters or owners.
And every freeman
Those who had been manumitted, commonly called
freedmen, and who were attached, through gratitude, to
the families of their liberators. All hid
themselves-were astonished at the total overthrow of the
heathen empire, and the revolution which had then taken place.
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Verse 16. Said to the mountains and
rocks Expressions which denote the
strongest perturbation and alarm. They preferred any kind of
death to that which they apprehended from this most awful
revolution.
From the face of him that sitteth
on the throne They now saw that all these
terrible judgments came from the Almighty; and that
Christ, the author of Christianity, was now judging,
condemning, and destroying them for their cruel persecutions
of his followers.
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Verse 17. For the great day of his
wrath The decisive and manifest time in
which he will execute judgment on the oppressors of his
people.
Who shall be able to
stand? No might can prevail against the
might of God. All these things may literally apply to the
final destruction of Jerusalem, and to the revolution which
took place in the Roman empire under Constantine the Great.
Some apply them to the day of judgment; but they do not
seem to have that awful event in view. These two events were
the greatest that have ever taken place in the world, from the
flood to the eighteenth century of the Christian era;
and may well justify the strong figurative language used
above.
Through I do not pretend to say that my remarks on this
chapter point out its true signification, yet I find others
have applied it in the same way. Dr. Dodd observes that
the fall of Babylon, Idumea, Judah, Egypt, and Jerusalem, has
been described by the prophets in language equally pompous,
figurative, and strong. See Isaiah
13:10;; 34:4,
concerning Babylon and Idumea; Jeremiah
4:23,24, concerning Judah; Ezekiel
32:7, concerning Egypt; Joel
2:10,31, concerning Jerusalem; and our Lord
himself, Matthew
24:29, concerning the same city. "Now," says he, "it is
certain that the fall of any of these cities or kingdoms was
not of greater concern or consequence to the world, nor more
deserving to be described in pompous figures, than the fall of
the pagan Roman empire, when the great lights of the
heathen world, the sun, moon, and stars, the powers
civil and ecclesiastical, were all eclipsed and obscured, the
heathen emperors and Caesars were slain, the heathen priests
and augurs were extirpated, the heathen officers and
magistrates were removed, the temples were demolished, and
their revenues were devoted to better uses. It is customary
with the prophets, after they have described a thing in the
most symbolical and figurative manner, to represent the same
again in plainer language; and the same method is observed
here, Revelation
6:15-17: And the kings of the earth, Maxentius,
Licinius, were so routed and dispersed that they hid
themselves in dens, expressions used to denote the utmost
terror and confusion. This is, therefore, a triumph of Christ
over his heathen enemies, and a triumph after a severe
persecution; so that the time and all the circumstances, as
well as the series and order of the prophecy, agree perfectly
with this interpretation. Galerius, Maximin, and
Licinius, made even a public confession of their guilt,
recalled their decrees and edicts against the Christians, and
acknowledged the just judgments of God and of Christ in their
own destruction." See Newton, Lowman, Dodd on
this chapter, with the works of several more recent authors.
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- Revelation 6:1.
Copyright Statement The Adam Clarke Commentary is a derivative
of an electronic edition prepared by GodRules.net.
Bibliography
Information Clarke, Adam.
"Commentary on Revelation 6". "The Adam Clarke
Commentary".
<http://www.studylight.org/com/acc/view.cgi?book=re&chapter=006>.
1832.
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