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Teks -- Revelation 20:1-15 (NET)

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The Thousand Year Reign
20:1 Then I saw an angel descending from heaven, holding in his hand the key to the abyss and a huge chain. 20:2 He seized the dragon– the ancient serpent, who is the devil and Satan– and tied him up for a thousand years. 20:3 The angel then threw him into the abyss and locked and sealed it so that he could not deceive the nations until the one thousand years were finished. (After these things he must be released for a brief period of time.) 20:4 Then I saw thrones and seated on them were those who had been given authority to judge. I also saw the souls of those who had been beheaded because of the testimony about Jesus and because of the word of God. These had not worshiped the beast or his image and had refused to receive his mark on their forehead or hand. They came to life and reigned with Christ for a thousand years. 20:5 (The rest of the dead did not come to life until the thousand years were finished.) This is the first resurrection. 20:6 Blessed and holy is the one who takes part in the first resurrection. The second death has no power over them, but they will be priests of God and of Christ, and they will reign with him for a thousand years.
Satan’s Final Defeat
20:7 Now when the thousand years are finished, Satan will be released from his prison 20:8 and will go out to deceive the nations at the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to bring them together for the battle. They are as numerous as the grains of sand in the sea. 20:9 They went up on the broad plain of the earth and encircled the camp of the saints and the beloved city, but fire came down from heaven and devoured them completely. 20:10 And the devil who deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur, where the beast and the false prophet are too, and they will be tormented there day and night forever and ever.
The Great White Throne
20:11 Then I saw a large white throne and the one who was seated on it; the earth and the heaven fled from his presence, and no place was found for them. 20:12 And I saw the dead, the great and the small, standing before the throne. Then books were opened, and another book was opened– the book of life. So the dead were judged by what was written in the books, according to their deeds. 20:13 The sea gave up the dead that were in it, and Death and Hades gave up the dead that were in them, and each one was judged according to his deeds. 20:14 Then Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death– the lake of fire. 20:15 If anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, that person was thrown into the lake of fire.
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Nama Orang, Nama Tempat, Topik/Tema Kamus

Nama Orang dan Nama Tempat:
 · Gog a figurative person,son of Shemaiah of Reuben,prince of the people/land of Magog: eschatological
 · Hades the place of departed spirits (NIV notes); the unseen world (YC)
 · Magog symbolic name for peoples from the remote corners of the earth,son of Japheth son of Noah,a symbol of all the pagan nations united against God
 · Satan a person, male (evil angelic),an angel that has rebelled against God


Topik/Tema Kamus: Satan | Angel | Milleium | REVELATION OF JOHN | Vision | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, VI-X | Resurrection | Millennium | Lake | Abyss | Hell | Death | Jesus, The Christ | Judgment | Judgment, The final | Pit | IMMORTAL; IMMORTALITY | Year | UNQUENCHABLE FIRE | Forehead | selebihnya
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Catatan Kata/Frasa
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Defender , TSK

Catatan Kata/Frasa
Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Catatan Ayat / Catatan Kaki
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Catatan Rentang Ayat
MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Evidence

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Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Kata/Frasa (per frasa)

Robertson: Rev 20:1 - Coming down out of heaven Coming down out of heaven ( katabainonta ek tou ouranou ). As in Rev 10:1; Rev 18:1.

Coming down out of heaven ( katabainonta ek tou ouranou ).

As in Rev 10:1; Rev 18:1.

Robertson: Rev 20:1 - The key of the abyss The key of the abyss ( tēn klein tēs abussou ). As in Rev 9:1.

The key of the abyss ( tēn klein tēs abussou ).

As in Rev 9:1.

Robertson: Rev 20:1 - A great chain A great chain ( halusin megalēn ). Paul wore a halusis (alpha privative and luō , to loose) in Rome (2Ti 1:16, as did Peter in prison in Jerusa...

A great chain ( halusin megalēn ).

Paul wore a halusis (alpha privative and luō , to loose) in Rome (2Ti 1:16, as did Peter in prison in Jerusalem (Act 12:6).

Robertson: Rev 20:1 - In his hand In his hand ( epi tēn cheira autou ). "Upon his hand,"ready for use. See epi with the genitive in Rev 1:20.

In his hand ( epi tēn cheira autou ).

"Upon his hand,"ready for use. See epi with the genitive in Rev 1:20.

Robertson: Rev 20:2 - He laid hold on He laid hold on ( ekratēsen ). First aorist active indicative of krateō , to seize.

He laid hold on ( ekratēsen ).

First aorist active indicative of krateō , to seize.

Robertson: Rev 20:2 - The dragon The dragon ( ton drakonta ). Accusative after ekratēsen instead of the genitive as in Rev 2:1. He has been behind the beast and the false prophet...

The dragon ( ton drakonta ).

Accusative after ekratēsen instead of the genitive as in Rev 2:1. He has been behind the beast and the false prophet from the start. Now he is seized.

Robertson: Rev 20:2 - The old serpent The old serpent ( ho ophis ho archaios ). Precisely the description in Rev 12:9, only the nominative is here retained, though in apposition with the ...

The old serpent ( ho ophis ho archaios ).

Precisely the description in Rev 12:9, only the nominative is here retained, though in apposition with the accusative ton drakonta , a frequent anacoluthon in the Apocalypse (Rev 1:5, etc.). Swete calls it a parenthesis.

Robertson: Rev 20:2 - Which is Which is ( hos estin ). The relative here relieves the construction and takes the place of ho kaloumenos in Rev 12:9 before Diabolos kai ho SatanaÌ...

Which is ( hos estin ).

The relative here relieves the construction and takes the place of ho kaloumenos in Rev 12:9 before Diabolos kai ho Satanās .

Robertson: Rev 20:2 - And bound him And bound him ( kai edēsen auton ). First aorist active indicative of deō .

And bound him ( kai edēsen auton ).

First aorist active indicative of deō .

Robertson: Rev 20:2 - For a thousand years For a thousand years ( chilia etē ). Accusative of extent of time. Here we confront the same problem found in the 1260 days. In this book of symbol...

For a thousand years ( chilia etē ).

Accusative of extent of time. Here we confront the same problem found in the 1260 days. In this book of symbols how long is a thousand years? All sorts of theories are proposed, none of which fully satisfy one. Perhaps Peter has given us the only solution open to us in 2Pe 3:8 when he argues that "one day with the Lord is as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day."It will help us all to remember that God’ s clock does not run by ours and that times and seasons and programs are with him. This wonderful book was written to comfort the saints in a time of great trial, not to create strife among them.

Robertson: Rev 20:3 - Into the abyss Into the abyss ( eis tēn abusson ). The one in Rev 9:1. and the one spoken of by the legion of demons in Luk 8:31 under the charge of the angel of ...

Into the abyss ( eis tēn abusson ).

The one in Rev 9:1. and the one spoken of by the legion of demons in Luk 8:31 under the charge of the angel of the abyss (Apollyon, Rev 9:11) who is either Satan himself or a kindred power. "Already he has been cast out of Heaven (Rev 12:9), now he is cast out of the earth, and returns to his own place"(Swete).

Robertson: Rev 20:3 - Shut it and sealed it Shut it and sealed it ( ekleisen kai esphragisen ). Effective first aorists active indicative of kleiō and sphragizō .

Shut it and sealed it ( ekleisen kai esphragisen ).

Effective first aorists active indicative of kleiō and sphragizō .

Robertson: Rev 20:3 - That he should deceive no more That he should deceive no more ( hina mē planēsēi ). Negative purpose clause with hina mē and the first aorist active subjunctive of planao...

That he should deceive no more ( hina mē planēsēi ).

Negative purpose clause with hina mē and the first aorist active subjunctive of planaō . Glorious relief after the strain of the previous visions of conflict. Small wonder that Christians today cherish this blessed hope whatever the actual meaning may be.

Robertson: Rev 20:3 - Until should be finished Until should be finished ( achri telesthēi ). Temporal clause of future purpose with achri (as a conjunction like heōs ) and the first aorist ...

Until should be finished ( achri telesthēi ).

Temporal clause of future purpose with achri (as a conjunction like heōs ) and the first aorist passive subjunctive of teleō . Repeated in Rev 20:5 and see achri and the subjunctive in Rev 7:3; Rev 15:8.

Robertson: Rev 20:3 - He must be loosed He must be loosed ( dei luthēnai ). Sad necessity, alas, with dei and the first aorist passive infinitive of luō .

He must be loosed ( dei luthēnai ).

Sad necessity, alas, with dei and the first aorist passive infinitive of luō .

Robertson: Rev 20:3 - For a little time For a little time ( mikron chronon ). Accusative of time. Whatever the thousand years means, it is here said plainly that after it is over the devil ...

For a little time ( mikron chronon ).

Accusative of time. Whatever the thousand years means, it is here said plainly that after it is over the devil will again have power on earth "for a little time."

Robertson: Rev 20:4 - And they sat upon them And they sat upon them ( kai ekathisan ep' autous ). First aorist active indicative of kathizō . Another period here apparently synchronous (Rev 20...

And they sat upon them ( kai ekathisan ep' autous ).

First aorist active indicative of kathizō . Another period here apparently synchronous (Rev 20:7) with the confinement of Satan in the abyss. No subject is given for this plural verb. Apparently Christ and the Apostles (Mat 19:28; Luk 22:30) and some of the saints (1Co 6:3), martyrs some hold.

Robertson: Rev 20:4 - Judgment was given unto them Judgment was given unto them ( krima edothē autois ). First aorist passive of didōmi . Picture of the heavenly court of assizes.

Judgment was given unto them ( krima edothē autois ).

First aorist passive of didōmi . Picture of the heavenly court of assizes.

Robertson: Rev 20:4 - The souls The souls ( tas psuchas ). Accusative after eidon at the beginning of the verse.

The souls ( tas psuchas ).

Accusative after eidon at the beginning of the verse.

Robertson: Rev 20:4 - Of them that had been beheaded Of them that had been beheaded ( tōn pepelekismenōn ). Genitive of the articular perfect passive participle of pelekizō , old word (from peleku...

Of them that had been beheaded ( tōn pepelekismenōn ).

Genitive of the articular perfect passive participle of pelekizoÌ„ , old word (from pelekus an axe, the traditional instrument for execution in republican Rome, but later supplanted by the sword), to cut off with an axe, here only in N.T. See Rev 6:9; Rev 18:24; Rev 19:2 for previous mention of these martyrs for the witness of Jesus (Rev 1:9; Rev 12:17; Rev 19:10). Others also besides martyrs shared in Christ’ s victory, those who refused to worship the beast or wear his mark as in Rev 13:15; Rev 14:9.; Rev 16:2; Rev 19:20.

Robertson: Rev 20:4 - And they lived And they lived ( kai ezēsan ). First aorist active indicative of zaō . If the ingressive aorist, it means "came to life"or "lived again"as in Rev...

And they lived ( kai ezēsan ).

First aorist active indicative of zaō . If the ingressive aorist, it means "came to life"or "lived again"as in Rev 2:8 and so as to Rev 20:5. If it is the constative aorist here and in Rev 20:5, then it could mean increased spiritual life. See Joh 5:21-29 for the double sense of life and death (now literal, now spiritual) precisely as we have the second death in Rev 2:11; Rev 20:6, Rev 20:14.

Robertson: Rev 20:4 - And reigned with Christ And reigned with Christ ( kai ebasileusan meta tou Christou ). Same use of the first aorist active indicative of basileuō , but more clearly consta...

And reigned with Christ ( kai ebasileusan meta tou Christou ).

Same use of the first aorist active indicative of basileuoÌ„ , but more clearly constative. Beckwith and Swete take this to apply solely to the martyrs, the martyrs’ reign with Christ.

Robertson: Rev 20:5 - The rest of the dead The rest of the dead ( hoi loipoi tōn nekrōn ). "All except the martyrs, both the righteous and the unrighteous"(Beckwith). But some take this to...

The rest of the dead ( hoi loipoi tōn nekrōn ).

"All except the martyrs, both the righteous and the unrighteous"(Beckwith). But some take this to mean only the wicked.

Robertson: Rev 20:5 - Lived not until the thousand years should be finished Lived not until the thousand years should be finished ( ouk ezēsan achri telesthēi ta chilia etē ). See Rev 20:4 for the items here. "To infer ...

Lived not until the thousand years should be finished ( ouk ezēsan achri telesthēi ta chilia etē ).

See Rev 20:4 for the items here. "To infer from this statement, as many expositors have done, that the ezēsan of Rev 20:4 must be understood of bodily resuscitation, is to interpret apocalyptic prophecy by methods of exegesis which are proper to ordinary narrative"(Swete). I sympathize wholly with that comment and confess my own ignorance therefore as to the meaning of the symbolism without any predilections for post-millennialism or premillennialism.

Robertson: Rev 20:5 - This is the first resurrection This is the first resurrection ( hautē hē anastasis hē prōtē ). Scholars differ as to the genuineness of this phrase. Accepting it as genui...

This is the first resurrection ( hautē hē anastasis hē prōtē ).

Scholars differ as to the genuineness of this phrase. Accepting it as genuine, Swete applies it to "the return of the martyrs and confessors to life at the beginning of the Thousand Years."According to this view the first resurrection is a special incident in the present life before the Parousia. It has no parallel with 1Th 4:16, where the dead in Christ are raised before those living are changed. Some think that John here pictures the "Regeneration"(palingenesia ) of Mat 19:28 and the "Restoration"(apokatastasis ) of Act 3:21. No effort is here made to solve this problem, save to call attention to the general judgment out of the books in Rev 20:12 and to the general resurrection in Joh 5:29; Act 24:15.

Robertson: Rev 20:6 - Blessed and holy Blessed and holy ( makarios kai hagios ). A fifth beatitude (Rev 1:3; Rev 14:13; Rev 16:15; Rev 19:9) already and two more to come (Rev 22:7, Rev 22:...

Blessed and holy ( makarios kai hagios ).

A fifth beatitude (Rev 1:3; Rev 14:13; Rev 16:15; Rev 19:9) already and two more to come (Rev 22:7, Rev 22:14, seven in all). Here hagios is added to the usual makarios . The second death (ho deuteros thanatos ). The spiritual death of Rev 2:11; Rev 20:14; Rev 21:8 in contrast to the first or physical death. This language raises a question about the interpretation of the first and the second resurrections, whether both are of the body or one of the spirit. There seems no way to reach a solid conception about it. In 1Co 15:23 there is no mention of the resurrection of any save "those of Christ"(hoi tou Christou ), though the end follows (1Co 15:24). However, Paul elsewhere (Act 24:15) speaks of the resurrection of the just and of the unjust as if one event.

Robertson: Rev 20:6 - Priests of God and of Christ Priests of God and of Christ ( hiereis tou theou kai tou Christou ). As in Rev 1:6; Rev 5:10; Rev 22:3, Rev 22:5.

Priests of God and of Christ ( hiereis tou theou kai tou Christou ).

As in Rev 1:6; Rev 5:10; Rev 22:3, Rev 22:5.

Robertson: Rev 20:6 - Shall reign with him Shall reign with him ( basileusousin met' autou ). As promised in the same passages. The servants of God are to be priests with Christ and to reign w...

Shall reign with him ( basileusousin met' autou ).

As promised in the same passages. The servants of God are to be priests with Christ and to reign with him (Mat 19:28). In Rev 5:10 epi tēs gēs (upon earth) occurs, but this item does not appear here. "No hint is given as to where this service is to be rendered and this royalty to be exercised"(Swete).

Robertson: Rev 20:7 - When are finished When are finished ( hotan telesthēi ). Indefinite future temporal clause with hotan and the first aorist passive subjunctive of teleō , "whenev...

When are finished ( hotan telesthēi ).

Indefinite future temporal clause with hotan and the first aorist passive subjunctive of teleō , "whenever are finished."

Robertson: Rev 20:7 - Shall be loosed Shall be loosed ( luthēsetai ). Future passive of luō , no longer bound as in Rev 20:2. He uses the future as a prophet in Rev 20:7, Rev 20:8, bu...

Shall be loosed ( luthēsetai ).

Future passive of luō , no longer bound as in Rev 20:2. He uses the future as a prophet in Rev 20:7, Rev 20:8, but in Rev 20:9, and Rev 20:10 he uses the aorist as a seer.

Robertson: Rev 20:7 - Out of his prison Out of his prison ( ek tēs phulakēs autou ). For phulakē in this sense see Rev 2:10. Out of the abyss of Rev 20:2, Rev 20:3.

Out of his prison ( ek tēs phulakēs autou ).

For phulakē in this sense see Rev 2:10. Out of the abyss of Rev 20:2, Rev 20:3.

Robertson: Rev 20:8 - To deceive the nations To deceive the nations ( planeÌ„sai ta ethneÌ„ ). First aorist active infinitive of purpose of planaoÌ„ , Satan’ s chief task (chapter 12 to cha...

To deceive the nations ( planēsai ta ethnē ).

First aorist active infinitive of purpose of planaoÌ„ , Satan’ s chief task (chapter 12 to chapter 18, in particular Rev 12:9; Rev 13:14; Rev 19:20; Rev 20:3, Rev 20:10).

Robertson: Rev 20:8 - Which are in the four corners of the earth Which are in the four corners of the earth ( ta en tais tessarsi gōniais tēs gēs ). Clearly the reign with Christ, if on earth, was not shared ...

Which are in the four corners of the earth ( ta en tais tessarsi gōniais tēs gēs ).

Clearly the reign with Christ, if on earth, was not shared in by all on earth, for Satan finds a large and ready following on his release. See Rev 7:1 (Isa 11:12) for "the four corners of the earth."

Robertson: Rev 20:8 - Gog and Magog Gog and Magog ( ton Gōg kai Magōg ). Accusative in explanatory apposition with ta ethnē (the nations). Magog is first mentioned in Gen 10:2. ...

Gog and Magog ( ton Gōg kai Magōg ).

Accusative in explanatory apposition with ta ethnē (the nations). Magog is first mentioned in Gen 10:2. The reference here seems to be Eze 38:2, where both are mentioned. Josephus ( Ant. I. 6. 1) identifies Magog with the Scythians, with Gog as their prince. In the rabbinical writings Gog and Magog appear as the enemies of the Messiah. Some early Christian writers thought of the Goths and Huns, but Augustine refuses to narrow the imagery and sees only the final protest of the world against Christianity.

Robertson: Rev 20:8 - To gather them together to the war To gather them together to the war ( sunagagein autous eis ton polemon ). Second aorist active infinitive of purpose of sunagō , a congenial task f...

To gather them together to the war ( sunagagein autous eis ton polemon ).

Second aorist active infinitive of purpose of sunagō , a congenial task for Satan after his confinement. See Rev 16:14 for this very phrase and also Rev 17:14; Rev 19:19.

Robertson: Rev 20:8 - Of whom Of whom ( hōn - autōn ). Pleonasm or redundant pronoun as in Rev 3:8 and often (of whom - of them).

Of whom ( hōn - autōn ).

Pleonasm or redundant pronoun as in Rev 3:8 and often (of whom - of them).

Robertson: Rev 20:8 - As the sand of the sea As the sand of the sea ( hōs hē ammos tēs thalassēs ). Already in Rev 13:1. Clearly then the millennium, whatever it is, does not mean a peri...

As the sand of the sea ( hōs hē ammos tēs thalassēs ).

Already in Rev 13:1. Clearly then the millennium, whatever it is, does not mean a period when Satan has no following on earth, for this vast host rallies at once to his standard.

Robertson: Rev 20:9 - They went up They went up ( anebēsan ). Second aorist active indicative of anabainō , a return to the manner of the seer as in Rev 20:4, Rev 20:5.

They went up ( anebēsan ).

Second aorist active indicative of anabainō , a return to the manner of the seer as in Rev 20:4, Rev 20:5.

Robertson: Rev 20:9 - Over the breadth of the earth Over the breadth of the earth ( epi to platos tēs gēs ). Platos is old word, in N.T. only here, Rev 21:16; Eph 3:18. The hosts of Satan spread ...

Over the breadth of the earth ( epi to platos tēs gēs ).

Platos is old word, in N.T. only here, Rev 21:16; Eph 3:18. The hosts of Satan spread over the earth.

Robertson: Rev 20:9 - Compassed Compassed ( ekukleusan ). First aorist (prophetic) active indicative of kukleuō , to encircle, late verb (Strabo) from kuklos (circle), in N.T. o...

Compassed ( ekukleusan ).

First aorist (prophetic) active indicative of kukleuō , to encircle, late verb (Strabo) from kuklos (circle), in N.T. only here and margin in Joh 10:24 (for ekuklōsan from kukloō ).

Robertson: Rev 20:9 - The camp of the saints The camp of the saints ( tēn parembolēn tōn hagiōn ). Parembolē (para , en , ballō ) is common late word for military camp, in lxx f...

The camp of the saints ( tēn parembolēn tōn hagiōn ).

Parembolē (para , en , ballō ) is common late word for military camp, in lxx for the Israelites in the desert (Exod 29:14, etc.), in N.T. for Roman barracks (Act 21:34, Act 21:37) and for an army in line of battle (Heb 11:34; Rev 20:9).

Robertson: Rev 20:9 - The beloved city The beloved city ( tēn polin tēn ēgapēmenēn ). Perfect passive participle of agapaō , "the city the beloved."See Psa 78:68; Psa 87:2 for ...

The beloved city ( tēn polin tēn ēgapēmenēn ).

Perfect passive participle of agapaō , "the city the beloved."See Psa 78:68; Psa 87:2 for Jerusalem so described. So Charles takes it here, but Swete holds it to be "the Church the New Zion"that is meant.

Robertson: Rev 20:9 - And fire came down out of heaven And fire came down out of heaven ( kai katebē pur ek tou ouranou ). Second aorist (prophetic) active indicative of katabainō . Cf. Gen 19:24; Gen...

And fire came down out of heaven ( kai katebē pur ek tou ouranou ).

Second aorist (prophetic) active indicative of katabainō . Cf. Gen 19:24; Gen 39:6; Eze 38:22; 2Ki 1:10, 2Ki 1:12; Luk 9:54 (about John).

Robertson: Rev 20:9 - Devoured them Devoured them ( katephagen autous ). Second aorist (prophetic) active of katesthiō , to eat up (down). Vivid climax to this last great battle with ...

Devoured them ( katephagen autous ).

Second aorist (prophetic) active of katesthiō , to eat up (down). Vivid climax to this last great battle with Satan.

Robertson: Rev 20:10 - Was cast Was cast ( eblēthē ). First aorist (prophetic, affective) passive indicative of ballō (Rev 20:3).

Was cast ( eblēthē ).

First aorist (prophetic, affective) passive indicative of ballō (Rev 20:3).

Robertson: Rev 20:10 - Into the lake of fire and brimstone Into the lake of fire and brimstone ( eis tēn limnēn tou puros kai theiou ). As in Rev 19:20 with the two beasts, as he adds, "where are also the...

Into the lake of fire and brimstone ( eis tēn limnēn tou puros kai theiou ).

As in Rev 19:20 with the two beasts, as he adds, "where are also the beast and the false prophet"(hopou kai to thērion kai ho pseudoprophētēs ).

Robertson: Rev 20:10 - They shall be tormented They shall be tormented ( basanisthēsontai ). Return to the prophetic future of Rev 20:7, Rev 20:8. For basanizō see Rev 9:5; Rev 14:10. For "d...

They shall be tormented ( basanisthēsontai ).

Return to the prophetic future of Rev 20:7, Rev 20:8. For basanizō see Rev 9:5; Rev 14:10. For "day and night"(hēmeras kai nuktos ) see Rev 4:8; Rev 7:15; Rev 12:10; Rev 14:11. For "for ever and ever"(eis tous aiōnas ton aiōnōn ) see Rev 1:6, Rev 1:18; Rev 4:9, Rev 4:10; Rev 5:13; Rev 7:12; Rev 10:6; Rev 11:15, etc. The devil was cast down from heaven (Rev 12:9), then imprisoned (Rev 20:2.), now he received his final doom.

Robertson: Rev 20:11 - A great white throne A great white throne ( thronon megan leukon ). Here megan (great) is added to the throne pictures in Rev 4:4; Rev 20:4. The scene is prepared for t...

A great white throne ( thronon megan leukon ).

Here megan (great) is added to the throne pictures in Rev 4:4; Rev 20:4. The scene is prepared for the last judgment often mentioned in the N.T. (Matt 25:31-46; Rom 14:10; 2Co 5:10). "The absolute purity of this Supreme Court is symbolized by the colour of the Throne"(Swete) as in Dan 7:9; Psa 9:1; Psa 97:2. The name of God is not mentioned, but the Almighty Father sits upon the throne (Rev 4:2., Rev 4:9; Rev 5:1, Rev 5:7, Rev 5:13; Rev 6:16; Rev 7:10, Rev 7:15; Rev 19:4; Rev 21:5), and the Son sits there with him (Heb 1:3) and works with the Father (Joh 5:19-21; Joh 10:30; Mat 25:31.; Act 17:31; 2Co 5:10; 2Ti 4:1).

Robertson: Rev 20:11 - From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away ( hou apo prosoÌ„pou ephugen heÌ„ ge kai ho ouranos ). Second aorist (prophetic) active of pheugoÌ...

From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away ( hou apo prosōpou ephugen hē ge kai ho ouranos ).

Second aorist (prophetic) active of pheugō . See Rev 16:20. The non-eternity of matter is a common teaching in the O.T. (Psa 97:5; Psa 102:27; Isa 51:6) as in the N.T. (Mar 13:31; 2Pe 3:10).

Robertson: Rev 20:11 - Was found Was found ( heurethē ). First aorist passive indicative of heuriskō . All is now spiritual. Even scientists today are speaking of the non-eternit...

Was found ( heurethē ).

First aorist passive indicative of heuriskō . All is now spiritual. Even scientists today are speaking of the non-eternity of the universe.

Robertson: Rev 20:12 - The dead, the great and the small The dead, the great and the small ( tous nekrous tous megalous kai tous mikrous ). The general resurrection of Rev 20:13 is pictured by anticipation ...

The dead, the great and the small ( tous nekrous tous megalous kai tous mikrous ).

The general resurrection of Rev 20:13 is pictured by anticipation as already over. No living are mentioned after the battle of Rev 20:7-10, though some will be living when Jesus comes to judge the quick and the dead (2Ti 4:1; 1Th 4:13.). All classes and conditions (Rev 11:18; Rev 13:16; Rev 19:5, Rev 19:18) John saw "standing before the throne"(hestōtas enōpion tou thronou ).

Robertson: Rev 20:12 - Books were opened Books were opened ( biblia ēnoichthēsan ). First aorist passive of anoigō . Like Dan 7:10. The record of each human being has been kept in God&...

Books were opened ( biblia ēnoichthēsan ).

First aorist passive of anoigoÌ„ . Like Dan 7:10. The record of each human being has been kept in God’ s books.

Robertson: Rev 20:12 - Were judged Were judged ( ekrithēsan ). First aorist passive indicative of krinō . The sentence upon each rests upon written evidence.

Were judged ( ekrithēsan ).

First aorist passive indicative of krinō . The sentence upon each rests upon written evidence.

Robertson: Rev 20:12 - Another book which is the book of life Another book which is the book of life ( allo biblion ho estin tēs zōēs ). This book has already been mentioned (Rev 3:5; Rev 13:8; Rev 17:8). ...

Another book which is the book of life ( allo biblion ho estin tēs zōēs ).

This book has already been mentioned (Rev 3:5; Rev 13:8; Rev 17:8). "It is the roll of living citizens of Jerusalem"(Swete), "the church of the first born enrolled in heaven"(Heb 12:23). The books are "the vouchers for the book of life"(Alford). We are saved by grace, but character at last (according to their works) is the test as the fruit of the tree (Mat 7:16, Mat 7:20; Mat 10:32.; 25:31-46; Joh 15:6; 2Co 5:10; Rom 2:10; Rev 2:23; Rev 20:12; Rev 22:12).

Robertson: Rev 20:13 - Gave up Gave up ( edōken ). Just "gave"(first aorist active indicative of didōmi ), but for the sea to give is to give up (effective aorist). Sea as wel...

Gave up ( edōken ).

Just "gave"(first aorist active indicative of didōmi ), but for the sea to give is to give up (effective aorist). Sea as well as land delivers its dead (all kinds of dead, good and bad). Swete notes that accidental deaths will not prevent any from appearing. Milligan is sure that the sea here means "the sea of the troubled and sinful world."

Robertson: Rev 20:13 - Death and Hades Death and Hades ( ho thanatos kai ho hāidēs ). "An inseparable pair"(Swete) as in Rev 1:18; Rev 6:8; Rev 20:14. So in Mat 16:18 "the gates of Had...

Death and Hades ( ho thanatos kai ho hāidēs ).

"An inseparable pair"(Swete) as in Rev 1:18; Rev 6:8; Rev 20:14. So in Mat 16:18 "the gates of Hades"means the power of death. Etymologically Hades is the unseen world where all who die are as opposed to this visible world, but in actual use Hades is sometimes treated as the abode of the unrighteous (Luk 16:23). Charles thinks that this is true here, though there is nothing to show it apart from the personification of death and Hades and the casting of both into the lake of fire in Rev 20:14. Here again "each man"(hekastos ) receives judgment according to his deeds (Mat 16:27; 1Co 3:13; 2Co 5:10; Rom 2:6; Rom 14:12; 1Pe 1:17; Rev 2:23).

Robertson: Rev 20:14 - Were cast Were cast ( eblēthēsan ). As the devil (Rev 20:10) followed the two beasts (Rev 19:20) into the same dread lake of fire. Death is personified and...

Were cast ( eblēthēsan ).

As the devil (Rev 20:10) followed the two beasts (Rev 19:20) into the same dread lake of fire. Death is personified and is disposed of, "the last enemy"(1Co 15:26) and Paul sings the paean of victory over death (1Co 15:54., from Hos 13:14). Hades has no more terrors, for the saints are in heaven. There is no more fear of death (Heb 2:15), for death is no more (Rev 21:4). The second death (Rev 2:11; Rev 20:6; Rev 21:8) is here identified as in Rev 21:8 with the lake of fire.

Robertson: Rev 20:15 - -- @@If any was not found written in the book of life (ei tis ouch heurethē en tēi biblōi tēs zōēs ). Condition of first class with ei an...

@@If any was not found written in the book of life (ei tis ouch heurethē en tēi biblōi tēs zōēs ). Condition of first class with ei and the first aorist passive indicative of heuriskō . In this short sentence the doom is told of all who are out of Christ, for they too follow the devil and the two beasts into the lake of fire (the counterpart of the Gehenna of fire, Mat 5:22). There is no room here for soul sleeping, for an intermediate state, for a second chance, or for annihilation of the wicked. In Dan 12:2 there is a resurrection to death as well as to life and so in Joh 5:29; Act 24:15.||

Vincent: Rev 20:1 - Of the bottomless pit Of the bottomless pit See on Rev 9:1. This is to be distinguished from the lake of fire. Compare Rev 20:10.

Of the bottomless pit

See on Rev 9:1. This is to be distinguished from the lake of fire. Compare Rev 20:10.

Vincent: Rev 20:1 - Chain Chain ( ἁÌλυσιν ) See on Mar 5:4. Only here in John's writings.

Chain ( ἁÌλυσιν )

See on Mar 5:4. Only here in John's writings.

Vincent: Rev 20:1 - In his hand In his hand ( ÎµÌ“Ï€Î¹Ì ) Lit., upon: resting on or hanging upon.

In his hand ( ÎµÌ“Ï€Î¹Ì )

Lit., upon: resting on or hanging upon.

Vincent: Rev 20:2 - He laid hold He laid hold ( ἐκÏαÌτησεν ) See on Mar 8:3; see on Act 3:11.

He laid hold ( ἐκÏαÌτησεν )

See on Mar 8:3; see on Act 3:11.

Vincent: Rev 20:2 - The dragon The dragon ( τὸν δÏαÌκοντα ) See on Rev 12:3. The word is commonly derived from ἐÌδÏακον, the second aorist tense of δÎ...

The dragon ( τὸν δÏαÌκοντα )

See on Rev 12:3. The word is commonly derived from ἐÌδÏακον, the second aorist tense of δεÌÏκομαι to see clearly , in allusion to the sharp sight of the fabled dragon.

Vincent: Rev 20:2 - Old Old ( ἀÏχαῖον ) See on 1Jo 2:7.

Old ( ἀÏχαῖον )

See on 1Jo 2:7.

Vincent: Rev 20:2 - The Devil The Devil Note the three epithets: the Old Serpent , the Devil , Satan . See on Mat 4:1; see on Luk 10:18.

The Devil

Note the three epithets: the Old Serpent , the Devil , Satan . See on Mat 4:1; see on Luk 10:18.

Vincent: Rev 20:3 - Sealed Sealed See on Joh 3:33.

Sealed

See on Joh 3:33.

Vincent: Rev 20:3 - Must Must ( δεῖ ) According to God's purpose. See on Mat 16:21; see on Luk 2:49; see on Luk 24:26.

Must ( δεῖ )

According to God's purpose. See on Mat 16:21; see on Luk 2:49; see on Luk 24:26.

Vincent: Rev 20:4 - Thrones Thrones See on Rev 2:13.

Thrones

See on Rev 2:13.

Vincent: Rev 20:4 - They sat They sat All the faithful members of Christ's Church. Compare they reigned with Christ .

They sat

All the faithful members of Christ's Church. Compare they reigned with Christ .

Vincent: Rev 20:4 - Beheaded Beheaded ( πεπελεκισμεÌνων ) From πεÌλεκυς an ax . Only here in the New Testament.

Beheaded ( πεπελεκισμεÌνων )

From πεÌλεκυς an ax . Only here in the New Testament.

Vincent: Rev 20:4 - They lived They lived Equivalent to lived again . Compare Rev 20:5.

They lived

Equivalent to lived again . Compare Rev 20:5.

Vincent: Rev 20:5 - Lived - again Lived - again ( ἀνεÌζησαν ) Read ἐÌζησαν lived , as in Rev 20:4

Lived - again ( ἀνεÌζησαν )

Read ἐÌζησαν lived , as in Rev 20:4

Vincent: Rev 20:6 - Hath part Hath part ( ἐÌχων μεÌÏος ) A phrase peculiar to John as referring to a person. Compare Joh 13:8.

Hath part ( ἐÌχων μεÌÏος )

A phrase peculiar to John as referring to a person. Compare Joh 13:8.

Vincent: Rev 20:6 - Second death Second death See on Rev 2:11.

Second death

See on Rev 2:11.

Vincent: Rev 20:8 - Gog and Magog Gog and Magog See Ezekiel 38, 39. Compare Gen 10:2. where Magog appears as a son of Japhet. Magog is a general name for the northern nations, and...

Gog and Magog

See Ezekiel 38, 39. Compare Gen 10:2. where Magog appears as a son of Japhet. Magog is a general name for the northern nations, and, according to Ezekiel, Gog is their prince. Josephus says that the descendants of Magog were the Scythians.

Vincent: Rev 20:9 - On the breadth On the breadth ( ἐπὶ τὸ πλαÌτος ) Lit., over (ÎµÌ“Ï€Î¹Ì ). As distinguished from the " four corners" of Rev 20:8. They over...

On the breadth ( ἐπὶ τὸ πλαÌτος )

Lit., over (ÎµÌ“Ï€Î¹Ì ). As distinguished from the " four corners" of Rev 20:8. They overspread the earth.

Vincent: Rev 20:9 - The camp The camp ( τὴν παÏεμβολὴν ) See on castle , Act 21:34. Encompassing and defending the city. Compare Psa 78:7.

The camp ( τὴν παÏεμβολὴν )

See on castle , Act 21:34. Encompassing and defending the city. Compare Psa 78:7.

Vincent: Rev 20:9 - The beloved city The beloved city Compare Psa 78:68.

The beloved city

Compare Psa 78:68.

Vincent: Rev 20:9 - From God From God Omit.

From God

Omit.

Vincent: Rev 20:12 - Before God Before God Read θÏοÌνου throne for Θεοῦ God . So Rev., before the throne .

Before God

Read θÏοÌνου throne for Θεοῦ God . So Rev., before the throne .

Vincent: Rev 20:12 - The books The books ( βιβλιÌα ) No article. Read books . Compare Dan 7:10.

The books ( βιβλιÌα )

No article. Read books . Compare Dan 7:10.

Vincent: Rev 20:12 - Book of life Book of life See on Rev 3:5.

Book of life

See on Rev 3:5.

Vincent: Rev 20:13 - The sea The sea As commonly understood, the sea means the literal sea, and the passage signifies that the dead contained in it shall rise. So Alford. Oth...

The sea

As commonly understood, the sea means the literal sea, and the passage signifies that the dead contained in it shall rise. So Alford. Other interpreters, however, say that it cannot mean the literal sea. Thus Milligan argues that the symbols of the Apocalypse must always be interpreted in the same way. " Symbols," he says, " are a form of speech, and therefore subject to the rules that regulate the interpretation of all speech... The power of that convention which links a certain sense to a certain sound in ordinary terms, is not less binding in the presence than in the absence of metaphor of any kind whatever. Thus when we read in the Apocalypse of 'the sea' as an emblem of the troubled and sinful nations of the earth, we are bound, unless forbidden by the context, to carry that interpretation through, and to understand the sea of the troubled and sinful world ."

Vincent: Rev 20:13 - Hell Hell ( ὁ ἁÌͅδης ) Rev., Hades . See on Mat 16:18.

Hell ( ὁ ἁÌͅδης )

Rev., Hades . See on Mat 16:18.

Vincent: Rev 20:14 - This is the second death This is the second death Add even the lake of fire .

This is the second death

Add even the lake of fire .

Vincent: Rev 20:15 - And whosoever And whosoever ( ÎµÎ¹Ì“Ì Ï„Î¹Ï‚ ) Lit., if any . So Rev.

And whosoever ( ÎµÎ¹Ì“Ì Ï„Î¹Ï‚ )

Lit., if any . So Rev.

Wesley: Rev 20:1 - And I saw an angel decending out of heaven Coming down with a commission from God. Jesus Christ himself overthrew the beast: the proud dragon shall be bound by an angel; even as he and his ange...

Coming down with a commission from God. Jesus Christ himself overthrew the beast: the proud dragon shall be bound by an angel; even as he and his angels were cast out of heaven by Michael and his angels.

Wesley: Rev 20:1 - Having the key of the bottomless pit Mentioned before, Rev 9:1.

Mentioned before, Rev 9:1.

Wesley: Rev 20:1 - And a great chain in his hand The angel of the bottomless pit was shut up therein before the beginning of the first woe. But it is now first that Satan, after he had occasioned the...

The angel of the bottomless pit was shut up therein before the beginning of the first woe. But it is now first that Satan, after he had occasioned the third woe, is both chained and shut up.

Wesley: Rev 20:2 - And he laid hold on the dragon With whom undoubtedly his angels were now cast into the bottomless pit, as well as finally "into everlasting fire," Mat 25:41.

With whom undoubtedly his angels were now cast into the bottomless pit, as well as finally "into everlasting fire," Mat 25:41.

Wesley: Rev 20:2 - And bound him a thousand years That these thousand do not precede, or run parallel with, but wholly follow, the times of the beast, may manifestly appear, 1. From the series of the ...

That these thousand do not precede, or run parallel with, but wholly follow, the times of the beast, may manifestly appear, 1. From the series of the whole book, representing one continued chain of events. 2. From the circumstances which precede. The woman's bringing forth is followed by the casting of the dragon out of heaven to the earth. With this is connected the third woe, whereby the dragon through, and with, the beast, rages horribly. At the conclusion of the third woe the beast is overthrown and cast into "the lake of fire." At the same time the other grand enemy, the dragon, shall be bound and shut up. 3. These thousand years bring a new, full, and lasting immunity from all outward and inward evils, the authors of which are now removed, and an affluence of all blessings. But such time the church has never yet seen. Therefore it is still to come. 4. These thousand years are followed by the last times of the world, the letting loose of Satan, who gathers together Gog and Magog, and is thrown to the beast and false prophet "in the lake of fire." Now Satan's accusing the saints in heaven, his rage on earth, his imprisonment in the abyss, his seducing Gog and Magog, and being cast into the lake of fire, evidently succeed each other. 5. What occurs from Rev. 20:11-22:5, manifestly follows the things related in the nineteenth chapter. The thousand years came between; whereas if they were past, neither the beginning nor the end of them would fall within this period. In a short time those who assert that they are now at hand will appear to have spoken the truth. Meantime let every man consider what kind of happiness he expects therein. The danger does not lie in maintaining that the thousand years are yet to come; but in interpreting them, whether past or to come, in a gross and carnal sense. The doctrine of the Son of God is a mystery. So is his cross; and so is his glory. In all these he is a sign that is spoken against. Happy they who believe and confess him in all!

Wesley: Rev 20:3 - And set a seal upon him How far these expressions are to be taken literally, how far figuratively only, who can tell? That he might deceive the nations no more - One benefit ...

How far these expressions are to be taken literally, how far figuratively only, who can tell? That he might deceive the nations no more - One benefit only is here expressed, as resulting from the confinement of Satan. But how many and great blessings are implied! For the grand enemy being removed, the kingdom of God holds on its uninterrupted course among the nations; and the great mystery of God, so long foretold, is at length fulfilled; namely, when the beast is destroyed and Satan bound. This fulfilment approaches nearer and nearer; and contains things of the utmost importance, the knowledge of which becomes every day more distinct and easy. In the mean time it is highly necessary to guard against the present rage and subtilty of the devil. Quickly he will be bound: when he is loosed again, the martyrs will live and reign with Christ. Then follow his coming in glory, the new heaven, new earth, and new Jerusalem. The bottomless pit is properly the devil's prison; afterwards he is cast into the lake of fire. He can deceive the nations no more till the "thousand years," mentioned before, Rev 20:2, are fulfilled.

Wesley: Rev 20:3 - Then he must be loosed So does the mysterious wisdom of God permit.

So does the mysterious wisdom of God permit.

Wesley: Rev 20:3 - For a small time Small comparatively: though upon the whole it cannot be very short, because the things to be transacted therein, Rev 20:8-9, must take up a considerab...

Small comparatively: though upon the whole it cannot be very short, because the things to be transacted therein, Rev 20:8-9, must take up a considerable space. We are very shortly to expect, one after another, the calamities occasioned by the second beast, the harvest and the vintage, the pouring out of the phials, the judgment of Babylon, the last raging of the beast and his destruction, the imprisonment of Satan. How great things these! and how short the time! What is needful for us? Wisdom, patience, faithfulness, watchfulness. It is no time to settle upon our lees. This is not, if it be rightly understood, an acceptable message to the wise, the mighty, the honourable, of this world. Yet that which is to be done, shall be done: there is no counsel against the Lord.

Wesley: Rev 20:4 - And I saw thrones Such as are promised the apostles, Mat 19:28; Luk 22:30.

Such as are promised the apostles, Mat 19:28; Luk 22:30.

Wesley: Rev 20:4 - And they Namely, the saints, whom St. John saw at the same time, Dan 7:22, sat upon them; and Judgment was given to them. 1Co 6:2. Who, and how many, these are...

Namely, the saints, whom St. John saw at the same time, Dan 7:22, sat upon them; and Judgment was given to them. 1Co 6:2. Who, and how many, these are, is not said. But they are distinguished from the souls, or persons, mentioned immediately after; and from the saints already raised.

Wesley: Rev 20:4 - And I saw the souls of those who had been beheaded With the axe: so the original word signifies. One kind of death, which was particularly inflicted at Rome, is mentioned for all. For the testimony of ...

With the axe: so the original word signifies. One kind of death, which was particularly inflicted at Rome, is mentioned for all. For the testimony of Jesus, and for the word of God - The martyrs were sometimes killed for the word of God in general; sometimes particularly for the testimony of Jesus: the one, while they refused to worship idols; the other, while they confessed the name of Christ. And those who had not worshipped the wild beast, nor his image - These seem to be a company distinct from those who appeared, Rev 15:2. Those overcame, probably, in such contests as these had not. Before the number of the beast was expired, the people were compelled to worship him, by the most dreadful violence. But when the beast "was not," they were only seduced into it by the craft of the false prophet.

Wesley: Rev 20:4 - And they lived Their souls and bodies being re - united.

Their souls and bodies being re - united.

Wesley: Rev 20:4 - And reigned with Christ Not on earth, but in heaven. The "reigning on earth" mentioned, Rev 11:15, is quite different from this.

Not on earth, but in heaven. The "reigning on earth" mentioned, Rev 11:15, is quite different from this.

Wesley: Rev 20:4 - A thousand years It must be observed, that two distinct thousand years are mentioned throughout this whole passage. Each is mentioned thrice; the thousand wherein Sata...

It must be observed, that two distinct thousand years are mentioned throughout this whole passage. Each is mentioned thrice; the thousand wherein Satan is bound, Rev 20:2-3, Rev 20:7; the thousand wherein the saints shall reign, Rev 20:4-6. The former end before the end of the world; the latter reach to the general resurrection. So that the beginning and end of the former thousand is before the beginning and end of the latter. Therefore as in Rev 20:2, at the first mention of the former; so in Rev 20:4, at the first mention of the latter, it is only said, a thousand years; in the other places, "the thousand," Rev 20:3, Rev 20:5, Rev 20:7, that is, the thousand mentioned before. During the former, the promises concerning the flourishing state of the church, Rev 10:7, shall be fulfilled; during the latter, while the saints reign with Christ in heaven, men on earth will be careless and secure.

Wesley: Rev 20:5 - The rest of the dead lived not till the thousand years Mentioned, Rev 20:4.

Mentioned, Rev 20:4.

Wesley: Rev 20:5 - Were ended The thousand years during which Satan is bound both begin and end much sooner. The small time, and the second thousand years, begin at the same point,...

The thousand years during which Satan is bound both begin and end much sooner.

The small time, and the second thousand years, begin at the same point, immediately after the first thousand. But neither the beginning of the first nor of the second thousand will be known to the men upon earth, as both the imprisonment of Satan and his loosing are transacted in the invisible world.

By observing these two distinct thousand years, many difficulties are avoided. There is room enough for the fulfilling of all the prophecies, and those which before seemed to clash are reconciled; particularly those which speak, on the one hand, of a most flourishing state of the church as yet to come; and, on the other, of the fatal security of men in the last days of the world.

Wesley: Rev 20:6 - They shall be priests of God and of Christ Therefore Christ is God.

Therefore Christ is God.

Wesley: Rev 20:6 - And shall reign with him With Christ, a thousand years.

With Christ, a thousand years.

Wesley: Rev 20:7 - And when the former thousand years are fulfilled, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison At the same time that the first resurrection begins. There is a great resemblance between this passage and Rev 12:12. At the casting out of the dragon...

At the same time that the first resurrection begins. There is a great resemblance between this passage and Rev 12:12. At the casting out of the dragon, there was joy in heaven, but there was woe upon earth: so at the loosing of Satan, the saints begin to reign with Christ; but the nations on earth are deceived.

Wesley: Rev 20:8 - And shall go forth to deceive the nations in the four corners of the earth (That is, in all the earth) - the more diligently, as he hath been so long restrained, and knoweth he hath but a small time.

(That is, in all the earth) - the more diligently, as he hath been so long restrained, and knoweth he hath but a small time.

Wesley: Rev 20:8 - Gog and Magog Magog, the second son of Japhet, is the father of the innumerable northern nations toward the east. The prince of these nations, of which the bulk of ...

Magog, the second son of Japhet, is the father of the innumerable northern nations toward the east. The prince of these nations, of which the bulk of that army will consist, is termed Gog by Ezekiel also, Eze 38:2. Both Gog and Magog signify high or lifted up; a name well suiting both the prince and people. When that fierce leader of many nations shall appear, then will his own name be known.

Wesley: Rev 20:8 - To gather them Both Gog and his armies. Of Gog, little more is said, as being soon mingled with the rest in the common slaughter. The Revelation speaks of this the m...

Both Gog and his armies. Of Gog, little more is said, as being soon mingled with the rest in the common slaughter. The Revelation speaks of this the more briefly, because it had been so particularly described by Ezekiel.

Wesley: Rev 20:8 - Whose number is as the sand of the sea Immensely numerous: a proverbial expression.

Immensely numerous: a proverbial expression.

Wesley: Rev 20:9 - And they went up on the breadth of the earth, or the land Filling the whole breadth of it.

Filling the whole breadth of it.

Wesley: Rev 20:9 - And surrounded the camp of the saints Perhaps the gentile church, dwelling round about Jerusalem.

Perhaps the gentile church, dwelling round about Jerusalem.

Wesley: Rev 20:9 - And the beloved city So termed, likewise, Ecclesiasticus 24:11.

So termed, likewise, Ecclesiasticus 24:11.

Wesley: Rev 20:10 - And they All these.

All these.

Wesley: Rev 20:10 - Shall be tormented day and night That is, without any intermission. Strictly speaking, there is only night there: no day, no sun, no hope!

That is, without any intermission. Strictly speaking, there is only night there: no day, no sun, no hope!

Wesley: Rev 20:11 - And I saw A representation of that great day of the Lord.

A representation of that great day of the Lord.

Wesley: Rev 20:11 - A great white throne How great, who can say? White with the glory of God, of him that sat upon it, - Jesus Christ. The apostle does not attempt to describe him here; only ...

How great, who can say? White with the glory of God, of him that sat upon it, - Jesus Christ. The apostle does not attempt to describe him here; only adds that circumstance, far above all description, From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away - Probably both the aerial and the starry heaven; which "shall pass away with a great noise." And there was found no place for them - But they were wholly dissolved, the very "elements melting with fervent heat." It is not said, they were thrown into great commotions, but they fled entirely away; not, they started from their foundations, but they " fell into dissolution;" not, they removed to a distant place, but there was found no place for them; they ceased to exist; they were no more. And all this, not at the strict command of the Lord Jesus; not at his awful presence, or before his fiery indignation; but at the bare presence of his Majesty, sitting with severe but adorable dignity on his throne.

Wesley: Rev 20:12 - And I saw the dead, great and small Of every age and condition. This includes, also, those who undergo a change equivalent to death, 1Co 15:51.

Of every age and condition. This includes, also, those who undergo a change equivalent to death, 1Co 15:51.

Wesley: Rev 20:12 - And the books Human judges have their books written with pen and ink: how different is the nature of these books! Were opened - O how many hidden things will then c...

Human judges have their books written with pen and ink: how different is the nature of these books! Were opened - O how many hidden things will then come to light; and how many will have quite another appearance than they had before in the sight of men! With the book of God's omniscience, that of conscience will then exactly tally. The book of natural law, as well as of revealed, will then also be displayed. It is not said, The books will be read: the light of that day will make them visible to all. Then, particularly, shall every man know himself, and that with the last exactness This will be the first true, full, impartial, universal history.

Wesley: Rev 20:12 - And another book Wherein are enrolled all that are accepted through the Beloved; all who lived and died in the faith that worketh by love. Which is the book of life, w...

Wherein are enrolled all that are accepted through the Beloved; all who lived and died in the faith that worketh by love. Which is the book of life, was opened - What manner of expectation will then be, with regard to the issue of the whole! Mal 3:16, &c.

Wesley: Rev 20:13 - Death and hades gave up the dead that were in them Death gave up all the bodies of men; and hades, the receptacle of separate souls, gave them up, to be re - united to their bodies.

Death gave up all the bodies of men; and hades, the receptacle of separate souls, gave them up, to be re - united to their bodies.

Wesley: Rev 20:14 - And death and hades were cast into the lake of fire That is, were abolished for ever; for neither the righteous nor the wicked were to die any more: their souls and bodies were no more to be separated. ...

That is, were abolished for ever; for neither the righteous nor the wicked were to die any more: their souls and bodies were no more to be separated. Consequently, neither death nor hades could any more have a being.

JFB: Rev 20:1 - 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 ...

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" (Rev 20:10).

JFB: Rev 20:2 - that old Ancient serpent (Rev 12:9).

Ancient serpent (Rev 12:9).

JFB: Rev 20:2 - 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 ...

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.

JFB: Rev 20:3 - shut him A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS omit "him."

A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS omit "him."

JFB: Rev 20:3 - 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 t...

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 (Rev 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 (Rev 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; Heb 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 Rev 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.

JFB: Rev 20:3 - that he should deceive So A. But B reads, "that he deceive" (Greek, "plana," for "planeesee").

So A. But B reads, "that he deceive" (Greek, "plana," for "planeesee").

JFB: Rev 20:3 - and So Coptic and ANDREAS. But A, B, and Vulgate omit "and."

So Coptic and ANDREAS. But A, B, and Vulgate omit "and."

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - they sat The twelve apostles, and the saints in general.

The twelve apostles, and the saints in general.

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - judgment was given unto there (See on Dan 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 sen...

(See on Dan 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."

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - 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...

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 Rev 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, Rev 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 Psa 49:11-15. From Rev 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.

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - beheaded Literally, "smitten with an axe"; a Roman punishment, though crucifixion, casting to beasts, and burning, were the more common modes of execution. The...

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.

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - for . . . for Greek, "for the sake of"; on account of"; "because of."

Greek, "for the sake of"; on account of"; "because of."

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - and which Greek, "and the which." And prominent among this class (the beheaded), such as did not worship the beast. So Rev 1:7, Greek, "and the which," or "and ...

Greek, "and the which." And prominent among this class (the beheaded), such as did not worship the beast. So Rev 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, 1Co 15:51; 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.

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - neither "not yet."

"not yet."

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - foreheads . . . hands Greek, "forehead . . . hand."

Greek, "forehead . . . hand."

JFB: Rev 20:4-5 - reigned with Christ Over the earth.

Over the earth.

JFB: Rev 20:5 - But B, Coptic, and ANDREAS read, "and." A and Vulgate omit it.

B, Coptic, and ANDREAS read, "and." A and Vulgate omit it.

JFB: Rev 20:5 - again A, B, Vulgate, Coptic, and ANDREAS omit it. "Lived" is used for lived again, as in Rev 2:8. John saw them not only when restored to life, but when in ...

A, B, Vulgate, Coptic, and ANDREAS omit it. "Lived" is used for lived again, as in Rev 2:8. John saw them not only when restored to life, but when in the act of reviving [BENGEL].

JFB: Rev 20:5 - 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 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; Isa 11:9; Isa 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" (Rev 20:6; Rev 1:6; Rev 5:10); their priesthood unto God and Christ (Rev 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].

JFB: Rev 20:6 - Blessed (Compare Rev 14:13; Rev 19:9).

(Compare Rev 14:13; Rev 19:9).

JFB: Rev 20:6 - on such the second death hath no power Even as it has none on Christ now that He is risen.

Even as it has none on Christ now that He is risen.

JFB: Rev 20:6 - priests of God Apostate Christendom being destroyed, and the believing Church translated at Christ's coming, there will remain Israel and the heathen world, constitu...

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 (Rev 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 Deu 32:21; Rom 10:19; Rom 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 Mat 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. (Gen 9:25-27; Gen 10:1, Gen 10:5, Gen 10:18, Gen 10:25, Gen 10:32; Deu 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 (Gen 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 (Rev 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].

JFB: Rev 20:7 - expired Greek, "finished."

Greek, "finished."

JFB: Rev 20:8 - 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 (Gen 10:2). A has bu...

(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 (Gen 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."

JFB: Rev 20:8 - to battle Greek, "to the war," in A and B. But ANDREAS omits "the."

Greek, "to the war," in A and B. But ANDREAS omits "the."

JFB: Rev 20:9 - on the breadth of the earth So as completely to overspread it. Perhaps we ought to translate, ". . . of the [holy] land."

So as completely to overspread it. Perhaps we ought to translate, ". . . of the [holy] land."

JFB: Rev 20:9 - 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 (Rev 18:2; Deu 32:15, Septuagint)....

The camp of the saints encircling the beloved city, Jerusalem (Ecclesiasticus 24:11). Contrast "hateful" in Babylon (Rev 18:2; Deu 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."

JFB: Rev 20:9 - 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, transfig...

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 (Rev 20:12) [AUBERLEN].

JFB: Rev 20:10 - that deceived Greek, "that deceiveth."

Greek, "that deceiveth."

JFB: Rev 20:10 - lake of fire His final doom: as "the bottomless pit" (Rev 20:1) was his temporary prison.

His final doom: as "the bottomless pit" (Rev 20:1) was his temporary prison.

JFB: Rev 20:10 - where So Coptic. But A, B, Vulgate, and Syriac read, "where also."

So Coptic. But A, B, Vulgate, and Syriac read, "where also."

JFB: Rev 20:10 - the beast and the false prophet are (Rev 19:20).

JFB: Rev 20:10 - day and night Figurative for without intermission (Rev 22:5), such as now is caused by night interposing between day and day. The same phrase is used of the externa...

Figurative for without intermission (Rev 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 (Rev 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.

JFB: Rev 20:10 - for ever and ever Greek, "to the ages of the ages."

Greek, "to the ages of the ages."

JFB: Rev 20:11 - great In contrast to the "thrones," Rev 20:4.

In contrast to the "thrones," Rev 20:4.

JFB: Rev 20:11 - white The emblem of purity and justice.

The emblem of purity and justice.

JFB: Rev 20:11 - 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 ...

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.

JFB: Rev 20:11 - earth and heaven fled away The final conflagration, therefore, precedes the general judgment. This is followed by the new heaven and earth (Rev. 21:1-27).

The final conflagration, therefore, precedes the general judgment. This is followed by the new heaven and earth (Rev. 21:1-27).

JFB: Rev 20:12 - the dead "the rest of the dead" who did not share the first resurrection, and those who died during the millennium.

"the rest of the dead" who did not share the first resurrection, and those who died during the millennium.

JFB: Rev 20:12 - 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 Chri...

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. Rom 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 Mat 25:31-32, Mat 25:40, "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, Rev 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.

JFB: Rev 20:12 - the books . . . opened (Dan 7:10). The books of God's remembrance, alike of the evil and the good (Psa 56:8; Psa 139:4; Mal 3:16): conscience (Rom 2:15-16), the word of Chr...

(Dan 7:10). The books of God's remembrance, alike of the evil and the good (Psa 56:8; Psa 139:4; Mal 3:16): conscience (Rom 2:15-16), the word of Christ (Joh 12:48), the law (Gal 3:10), God's eternal counsel (Psa 139:16).

JFB: Rev 20:12 - book of life (Rev 3:5; Rev 13:8; Rev 21:27; Exo 32:32-33; Psa 69:28; Dan 12:1; Phi 4:3). Besides the general book recording the works of all, there is a special b...

(Rev 3:5; Rev 13:8; Rev 21:27; Exo 32:32-33; Psa 69:28; Dan 12:1; Phi 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.

JFB: Rev 20:12 - 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...

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 (Rev 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.

JFB: Rev 20:13 - 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 ...

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 Rev 8:8; Rev 12:12; Rev 13:1; Rev 18:17, Rev 18:19; so "death" and "hell" are personifications (compare Rev 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.

JFB: Rev 20:14 - -- 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 tru...

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.

JFB: Rev 20:14 - 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 ...

"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.

JFB: Rev 20:15 - -- The blissful lot of the righteous is not here specially mentioned as their bliss had commenced before the final judgment. Compare, however, Mat 25:34,...

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

Clarke: Rev 20:1 - An angel came down from heaven An angel came down from heaven - One of the executors of the Divine justice, who receives criminals, and keeps them in prison, and delivers them up ...

An angel came down from heaven - One of the executors of the Divine justice, who receives criminals, and keeps them in prison, and delivers them up only to be tried and executed

The key of the prison and the chain show who he is; and as the chain was great, it shows that the culprit was impeached of no ordinary crimes.

Clarke: Rev 20:2 - The dragon The dragon - See the notes on Rev 12:9

The dragon - See the notes on Rev 12:9

Clarke: Rev 20:2 - That old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan That old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan - He who is called the old serpent is the Devil - the calumniator, and Satan - the opposer. He who s...

That old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan - He who is called the old serpent is the Devil - the calumniator, and Satan - the opposer. He who supposes that the term old serpent here plainly proves that the creature that tempted our first parents was actually a snake, must enjoy his opinion; and those who can receive such a saying, why let them receive it. Selah

Clarke: Rev 20:2 - A thousand years A thousand years - In what this binding of Satan consists, who can tell? How many visions have been seen on this subject both in ancient and modern ...

A thousand years - In what this binding of Satan consists, who can tell? How many visions have been seen on this subject both in ancient and modern times! This, and what is said Rev 20:3-5, no doubt refers to a time in which the influence of Satan will be greatly restrained, and the true Church of God enjoy great prosperity, which shall endure for a long time. But it is not likely that the number, a thousand years, is to be taken literally here, and year symbolically and figuratively in all the book beside. The doctrine of the millennium, or of the saints reigning on earth a thousand years, with Christ for their head, has been illustrated and defended by many Christian writers, both among the ancients and moderns. Were I to give a collection of the conceits of the primitive fathers on this subject, my readers would have little reason to applaud my pains. It has long been the idle expectation of many persons that the millennium, in their sense, was at hand; and its commencement has been expected in every century since the Christian era. It has been fixed for several different years, during the short period of my own life! I believed those predictions to be vain, and I have lived to see them such. Yet there is no doubt that the earth is in a state of progressive moral improvement; and that the light of true religion is shining more copiously everywhere, and will shine more and more to the perfect day. But when the religion of Christ will be at its meridian of light and heat, we know not. In each believer this may speedily take place; but probably no such time shall ever appear, in which evil shall be wholly banished from the earth, till after the day of judgment, when the earth having been burnt up, a new heaven and a new earth shall be produced out of the ruins of the old, by the mighty power of God: righteousness alone shall dwell in them. The phraseology of the apostle here seems partly taken from the ancient prophets, and partly rabbinical; and it is from the Jewish use of those terms that we are to look for their interpretation.

Clarke: Rev 20:3 - He should deceive the nations no more He should deceive the nations no more - Be unable to blind men with superstition and idolatry as he had formerly done.

He should deceive the nations no more - Be unable to blind men with superstition and idolatry as he had formerly done.

Clarke: Rev 20:4 - I saw thrones I saw thrones - Christianity established in the earth, the kings and governors being all Christians

I saw thrones - Christianity established in the earth, the kings and governors being all Christians

Clarke: Rev 20:4 - Reigned with Christ a thousand years Reigned with Christ a thousand years - I am satisfied that this period should not be taken literally. It may signify that there shall be a long and ...

Reigned with Christ a thousand years - I am satisfied that this period should not be taken literally. It may signify that there shall be a long and undisturbed state of Christianity; and so universally shall the Gospel spirit prevail, that it will appear as if Christ reigned upon earth; which will in effect be the case, because his Spirit shall rule in the hearts of men; and in this time the martyrs are represented as living again; their testimony being revived, and the truth for which they died, and which was confirmed by their blood, being now everywhere prevalent. As to the term thousand years, it is a mystic number among the Jews. Midrash Tillin, in Psa 90:15, Make us glad according to the days wherein thou hast afflicted us, adds, "by Babylon, Greece, and the Romans; and in the days of the Messiah. How many are the days of the Messiah? Rab. Elieser, the son of R. Jose, of Galilee, said, The days of the Messiah are a thousand years.

Sanhedrin, fol. 92, 1, cited by the Aruch, under the word ×ירק says: "There is a tradition in the house of Elias, that the righteous, whom the holy blessed God shall raise from the dead, shall not return again to the dust; but for the space of a thousand years, in which the holy blessed God shall renew the world, they shall have wings like the wings of eagles, and shall fly above the waters."It appears therefore that this phraseology is purely rabbinical. Both the Greeks and Latins have the same form of speech in speaking on the state of the righteous and wicked after death. There is something like this in the Republic of Plato, book x., p. 322, edit. Bip., where, speaking of Erus, the son of Armenius, who came to life after having been dead twelve days, and who described the states of departed souls, asserting "that some were obliged to make a long peregrination under the earth before they arose to a state of happiness, ειναι δε την ποÏειαν χιλιετη, for it was a journey of a thousand years,"he adds, "that, as the life of man is rated at a hundred years, those who have been wicked suffer in the other world a ten-fold punishment, and therefore their punishment lasts a thousand years.

A similar doctrine prevailed among the Romans; whether they borrowed it from the Greeks, or from the rabbinical Jews, we cannot tell

Thus Virgil, speaking of the punishment of the wicked in the infernal regions, says: -

Has omnes, ubi Mille rotam volvere per annos

Lethaeum ad fluvium Deus evocat agmine magno

Scilicet immemores supera ut convexa revisant

Rursus et incipiant in corpora velle reverti

Aen., lib. vi., 748

"But when a thousand rolling years are past

So long their dreary punishment shall last

Whole droves of spirits, by the driving god

Are led to drink the deep Lethean floo

In large, forgetful draughts, to sleep the care

Of their past labors and their irksome years

That, unremembering of its former pain

The soul may clothe itself with flesh again.

How the apostle applies this general tradition, or in what sense he may use it, who can tell?

Clarke: Rev 20:5 - The rest of the dead lived not again The rest of the dead lived not again - It is generally supposed from these passages that all who have been martyred for the truth of God shall be ra...

The rest of the dead lived not again - It is generally supposed from these passages that all who have been martyred for the truth of God shall be raised a thousand years before the other dead, and reign on earth with Christ during that time, after which the dead in general shall be raised; but this also is very doubtful.

Clarke: Rev 20:6 - Blessed Blessed - ΜακαÏιος· Happy. And holy; he was holy, and therefore he suffered for the testimony of Jesus in the time when nothing but holin...

Blessed - ΜακαÏιος· Happy. And holy; he was holy, and therefore he suffered for the testimony of Jesus in the time when nothing but holiness was called to such a trial

Clarke: Rev 20:6 - The first resurrection The first resurrection - Supposed to be that of the martyrs, mentioned above

The first resurrection - Supposed to be that of the martyrs, mentioned above

Clarke: Rev 20:6 - The second death The second death - Punishment in the eternal world; such is the acceptation of the phrase among the ancient Jews

The second death - Punishment in the eternal world; such is the acceptation of the phrase among the ancient Jews

Clarke: Rev 20:6 - Hath no power Hath no power - Ουκ εχει εξουσιαν· Hath no authority - no dominion over him. This is also a rabbinical mode of speech. In Erubin, ...

Hath no power - Ουκ εχει εξουσιαν· Hath no authority - no dominion over him. This is also a rabbinical mode of speech. In Erubin, fol. 19, 1; Chagiga, fol. 27, 1: "Res Lakish said, The fire of hell hath no power over an Israelite who sins. Rab. Elieser says; The fire of hell hath no power over the disciples of the wise men."

Clarke: Rev 20:7 - Satan shall be loosed Satan shall be loosed - How can this bear any kind of literal interpretation? Satan is bound a thousand years, and the earth is in peace; righteousn...

Satan shall be loosed - How can this bear any kind of literal interpretation? Satan is bound a thousand years, and the earth is in peace; righteousness flourishes, and Jesus Christ alone reigns. This state of things may continue for ever if the imprisonment of Satan be continued. Satan, however, is loosed at the end of the thousand years, and goes out and deceives the nations, and peace is banished from the face of the earth, and a most dreadful war takes place, etc., etc. These can be only symbolical representations, utterly incapable of the sense generally put upon them.

Clarke: Rev 20:8 - Gog and Magog Gog and Magog - This seems to be almost literally taken from the Jerusalem Targum, and that of Jonathan ben Uzziel, on Num 11:26. I shall give the w...

Gog and Magog - This seems to be almost literally taken from the Jerusalem Targum, and that of Jonathan ben Uzziel, on Num 11:26. I shall give the words at length: "And there were two men left in the camp, the name of the one was Eldad, the name of the other was Medad, and on them the spirit of prophecy rested. Eldad prophesied and said, ‘ Behold, Moses the prophet, the scribe of Israel, shall be taken from this world; and Joshua the son of Nun, captain of the host, shall succeed him.’ Medad prophesied and said, ‘ Behold quails shall arise out of the sea, and be a stumbling block to Israel.’ Then they both prophesied together, and said, ‘ In the very end of time Gog and Magog and their army shall come up against Jerusalem, and they shall fall by the hand of the King Messiah; and for seven whole years shall the children of Israel light their fires with the wood of their warlike engines, and they shall not go to the wood nor cut down any tree.’ "In the Targum of Jonathan ben Uzziel, on the same place, the same account is given; only the latter part, that is, the conjoint prophecy of Eldad and Medad, is given more circumstantially, thus: "And they both prophesied together, and said, ‘ Behold, a king shall come up from the land of Magog in the last days, and shall gather the kings together, and leaders clothed with armor, and all people shall obey them; and they shall wage war in the land of Israel against the children of the captivity, but the hour of lamentation has been long prepared for them, for they shall be slain by the flame of fire which shall proceed from under the throne of glory, and their dead carcasses shall fall on the mountains of the land of Israel; and all the wild beasts of the field, and the wild fowl of heaven, shall come and devour their carcasses; and afterwards all the dead of Israel shall rise again to life, and shall enjoy the delights prepared for them from the beginning, and shall receive the reward of their worlds.’

This account seems most evidently to have been copied by St. John, but how he intended it to be applied is a question too difficult to be solved by the skill of man; yet both the account in the rabbins and in St. John is founded on Ezekiel, Ezekiel 38:1-39:29. The rabbinical writings are full of accounts concerning Gog and Magog, of which Wetstein has made a pretty large collection in his notes on this place. Under these names the enemies of God’ s truth are generally intended.

Clarke: Rev 20:9 - The beloved city The beloved city - Primarily, Jerusalem, typically, the Christian Church.

The beloved city - Primarily, Jerusalem, typically, the Christian Church.

Clarke: Rev 20:10 - And the devil - was cast onto the lake And the devil - was cast onto the lake - Before Satan was bound, that is, his power was curtailed and restrained; now, he is cast into the lake of f...

And the devil - was cast onto the lake - Before Satan was bound, that is, his power was curtailed and restrained; now, he is cast into the lake of fire, his power being totally taken away.

Clarke: Rev 20:11 - A great white throne A great white throne - Refulgent with glorious majesty

A great white throne - Refulgent with glorious majesty

Clarke: Rev 20:11 - Him that sat on it Him that sat on it - The indescribable Jehovah

Him that sat on it - The indescribable Jehovah

Clarke: Rev 20:11 - From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away - Even the brightness of his countenance dissolved the universe, and annihilated the laws by whic...

From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away - Even the brightness of his countenance dissolved the universe, and annihilated the laws by which it was governed. This is a very majestic figure, and finely expressed

Clarke: Rev 20:11 - There was found no place for them There was found no place for them - The glorious majesty of God filling all things, and being all in all.

There was found no place for them - The glorious majesty of God filling all things, and being all in all.

Clarke: Rev 20:12 - The dead, small and great The dead, small and great - All ranks, degrees, and conditions of men. This description seems to refer to Dan 7:9, Dan 7:10

The dead, small and great - All ranks, degrees, and conditions of men. This description seems to refer to Dan 7:9, Dan 7:10

Clarke: Rev 20:12 - And the books were opened And the books were opened - See Dan 12:1. "Rab. Jehuda said: All the actions of men, whether good or bad, are written in a book, and of all they sha...

And the books were opened - See Dan 12:1. "Rab. Jehuda said: All the actions of men, whether good or bad, are written in a book, and of all they shall give account."- Sohar Gen., fol. 79, col. 298. "How careful should men be to shun vice, and to act uprightly before the holy blessed God, seeing there are so many which go throughout the earth, see the works of men, testify of them, and write them in a book!"- Ibid., fol. 105, col. 417

"In the first day of the new year the holy blessed God sits that he may judge the world; and all men, without exception, give an account of themselves; and the books of the living and the dead are opened.

Sohar Chadash, fol. 19, 1

The books mentioned here were the books of the living and the dead, or the book of life and the book of death: that is, the account of the good and evil actions of men; the former leading to life, the latter to death. St. John evidently alludes here to Dan 7:10, on which the rabbinical account of the books appears to be founded. The expressions are figurative in both

Clarke: Rev 20:12 - According to their works According to their works - And according to their faith also, for their works would be the proof whether their faith were true or false; but faith e...

According to their works - And according to their faith also, for their works would be the proof whether their faith were true or false; but faith exclusively could be no rule in such a procedure.

Clarke: Rev 20:13 - The sea gave up the dead The sea gave up the dead - Those who had been drowned in it, and those millions slain in naval contests, who had no other grave

The sea gave up the dead - Those who had been drowned in it, and those millions slain in naval contests, who had no other grave

Clarke: Rev 20:13 - And death And death - All who died by any kind of disease. Death is here personified, and represented as a keeper of defunct human beings; probably no more th...

And death - All who died by any kind of disease. Death is here personified, and represented as a keeper of defunct human beings; probably no more than earth or the grave is meant, as properly belonging to the empire of death

Clarke: Rev 20:13 - And hell And hell - Ἁιδης, Hades, the place of separate spirits. The sea and death have the bodies of all human beings; hades has their spirits. That...

And hell - Ἁιδης, Hades, the place of separate spirits. The sea and death have the bodies of all human beings; hades has their spirits. That they may be judged, and punished or rewarded according to their works, their bodies and souls must be reunited; hades, therefore, gives up the spirits; and the sea and the earth give up the bodies.

Clarke: Rev 20:14 - And death and hell were cast into the lake And death and hell were cast into the lake - Death himself is now abolished, and the place for separate spirits no longer needful. All dead bodies a...

And death and hell were cast into the lake - Death himself is now abolished, and the place for separate spirits no longer needful. All dead bodies and separated souls being rejoined, and no more separation of bodies and souls by death to take place, consequently the existence of these things is no farther necessary

Clarke: Rev 20:14 - This is the second death This is the second death - The first death consisted in the separation of the soul from the body for a season; the second death in the separation of...

This is the second death - The first death consisted in the separation of the soul from the body for a season; the second death in the separation of body and soul from God for ever. The first death is that from which there may be a resurrection; the second death is that from which there can be no recovery. By the first the body is destroyed during time; by the second, body and soul are destroyed through eternity.

Clarke: Rev 20:15 - Written in the book of life Written in the book of life - Only those who had continued faithful unto death were taken to heaven. All whose names were not found in the public re...

Written in the book of life - Only those who had continued faithful unto death were taken to heaven. All whose names were not found in the public registers, who either were not citizens, or whose names had been erased from those registers because of crimes against the state, could claim none of those emoluments or privileges which belong to the citizens; so those who either did not belong to the new and spiritual Jerusalem, or who had forfeited their rights and privileges by sin, and had died in that state, were cast into the lake of fire

This is the way in which God, at the day of judgment, will proceed with sinners and apostates. Reader, see that thy name be written in the sacred register; and, if written in, see that it never be blotted out.

Defender: Rev 20:1 - angel The angel may well be the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, since it is He who has the key to the bottomless pit (Rev 1:18), and it would be most appropriate...

The angel may well be the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, since it is He who has the key to the bottomless pit (Rev 1:18), and it would be most appropriate for the Son, on behalf of the Father, to personally dispatch the great rebel to his prison.

Defender: Rev 20:1 - bottomless pit The demons had dreaded the prospect of being sent by Christ to "the deep" (same Greek word, Luk 8:31), but the "time" for their "torment" (Mat 8:29) w...

The demons had dreaded the prospect of being sent by Christ to "the deep" (same Greek word, Luk 8:31), but the "time" for their "torment" (Mat 8:29) will finally have come as they will be corralled with their evil prince into the deep dungeon (on the bottomless pit, the Greek word abussos, see note on Rev 9:1).

Defender: Rev 20:1 - great chain The "great chain," with which to "bind the strong man" (Mar 3:27) is a spiritual chain to restrain the spiritual being called Satan, but it will serve...

The "great chain," with which to "bind the strong man" (Mar 3:27) is a spiritual chain to restrain the spiritual being called Satan, but it will serve the purpose, whatever it is."

Defender: Rev 20:2 - And Note that almost every verse in this chapter begins with "and" (Greek kai). The events reported in succession, one after another, are undoubtedly real...

Note that almost every verse in this chapter begins with "and" (Greek kai). The events reported in succession, one after another, are undoubtedly real events that will happen just as John reported them.

Defender: Rev 20:2 - Satan Note the same series of identifying names in Rev 12:9.

Note the same series of identifying names in Rev 12:9.

Defender: Rev 20:2 - thousand years The "thousand years" or millennium (Greek chiliai), should be taken literally. It is mentioned six times in Rev 20:2-7, as though the Lord would make ...

The "thousand years" or millennium (Greek chiliai), should be taken literally. It is mentioned six times in Rev 20:2-7, as though the Lord would make it emphatically clear that Satan will be restrained for literally a thousand years. He is certainly not "bound" in this present age, for he still "walketh about, seeking whom he may devour" (1Pe 5:8)."

Defender: Rev 20:3 - no more With Satan bound in the bottomless pit, the beast and the false prophet in the lake of fire, and all the ungodly men and women purged from the earth e...

With Satan bound in the bottomless pit, the beast and the false prophet in the lake of fire, and all the ungodly men and women purged from the earth either at Armageddon or at the judgment of the nations (see notes on Matthew 25:31-46), there will be only a "few men left" (Isa 24:6) still in their natural flesh to enter Christ's millennial kingdom (Mat 25:34). Redeemed Israel, having been saved both individually and nationally when she sees and accepts her Messiah (Zechariah 12:9-13:1; Rom 11:25, Rom 11:26), will become the world's chief nation. All the ancient prophecies and promises concerning Israel will finally be fulfilled (Isa 2:2-4; Eze 37:21-28; Zec 9:10; Zec 14:9)."

Defender: Rev 20:4 - given unto them Peace and righteousness under the iron rule of Christ and His resurrected saints (Rev 2:26, Rev 2:27; Rev 19:15; 1Co 6:2, 1Co 6:3), will endure for a ...

Peace and righteousness under the iron rule of Christ and His resurrected saints (Rev 2:26, Rev 2:27; Rev 19:15; 1Co 6:2, 1Co 6:3), will endure for a thousand years. Furthermore, the catastrophic changes on the earth's surface during the tribulation judgments will have restored the gentle topography and protecting vapor canopy over the earth (Isa 40:4; Psa 148:4-6), so that the primeval "very good" condition of the whole world (Gen 1:31) will be restored in large measure. Harmony will also be restored between men and animals, and people will again have only one language and will live to great ages (Isa 11:6-9; Zep 3:9; Isa 65:20).

Defender: Rev 20:4 - beheaded Evidently, those who refuse the beast's mark will be executed by the guillotine.

Evidently, those who refuse the beast's mark will be executed by the guillotine.

Defender: Rev 20:4 - lived The "souls" of the tribulation martyrs will have been resting "under" the heavenly altar (Rev 6:9-11) until the seven years of tribulation are done, b...

The "souls" of the tribulation martyrs will have been resting "under" the heavenly altar (Rev 6:9-11) until the seven years of tribulation are done, but then will apparently be resurrected to join all the other raptured and resurrected saints of all the ages.

Defender: Rev 20:4 - reigned The saints will all be "kings and priests" (Rev 20:6) under their Lord, Jesus Christ, with various degrees of authority as based on faithfulness of se...

The saints will all be "kings and priests" (Rev 20:6) under their Lord, Jesus Christ, with various degrees of authority as based on faithfulness of service while in this present life (Rev 1:6; Rev 5:10; Mat 19:28; Luk 19:17, Luk 19:19)."

Defender: Rev 20:5 - lived not again This phrase clearly indicates bodily resurrection after bodily death. The unsaved dead will not live again spiritually for they are in Hades and will ...

This phrase clearly indicates bodily resurrection after bodily death. The unsaved dead will not live again spiritually for they are in Hades and will ultimately be in the lake of fire. In fact, the term "resurrection" itself occurs over forty times in the New Testament and always refers to the resurrection of the body.

Defender: Rev 20:5 - finished Jesus had referred to "the resurrection of life" and "the resurrection of damnation" (Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29), as had Daniel (Dan 12:2); but here it is re...

Jesus had referred to "the resurrection of life" and "the resurrection of damnation" (Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29), as had Daniel (Dan 12:2); but here it is revealed that the first resurrection will be completed a thousand years before the second. The word "is" does not appear in the Greek. The sense probably is that this completes the first resurrection (1Co 15:22, 1Co 15:23; Mat 27:52, Mat 27:53; Rev 11:11)."

Defender: Rev 20:6 - second death The second death must be a bodily death, imposed after the second resurrection on all those who still are spiritually dead in their sins and trespasse...

The second death must be a bodily death, imposed after the second resurrection on all those who still are spiritually dead in their sins and trespasses (Eph 2:1; Rev 20:13, Rev 20:14).

Defender: Rev 20:6 - priests of God The resurrected saints will be both kings and priests (Rev 1:6), exercising both judicial rule (1Co 6:2) and religious ministries in relation to the g...

The resurrected saints will be both kings and priests (Rev 1:6), exercising both judicial rule (1Co 6:2) and religious ministries in relation to the growing human populations on earth. They may be ministering to those who had died or been raptured while still "babes in Christ," either infants physically or spiritually. These somehow must be brought to full maturity in Christ, both physically and spiritually, and the already-matured saints could conceivably be participants in their further growth."

Defender: Rev 20:7 - Satan shall be loosed The events described in Rev 20:7-9 take place only after there have been a thousand years of enforced peace and righteousness. In Rev 20:3, it was sai...

The events described in Rev 20:7-9 take place only after there have been a thousand years of enforced peace and righteousness. In Rev 20:3, it was said that Satan must be loosed a little season, evidently to give men an opportunity to reveal the basic rebellion still simmering in their human natures, and in order to see openly whether they will choose Satan over God, as their ancestors had done a thousand years before. Those entering the millennial period will be genuine believers, but their descendants will evidently drift away from the faith of their fathers as the generations accumulate and the population grows. Open rebellion, as well as crime and warfare, will be impossible. Satan and his hosts will all be bound in Hades, but men and women will still be born with sinful natures and will need to receive Christ as their personal Savior by faith. If they do not, they will still be vulnerable to Satanic deception when Satan is released to tempt them."

Defender: Rev 20:8 - Gog and Magog Despite the duplication of names, this Gog and Magog incursion after the thousand years does not seem to be the same as the invasion of Israel by Gog ...

Despite the duplication of names, this Gog and Magog incursion after the thousand years does not seem to be the same as the invasion of Israel by Gog and Magog before the thousand years, as described in Ezekiel 38 and 39. The combatants in the two battles are quite different from each other and the outcomes are drastically different, as is obvious from even a casual reading of the two accounts. It may be that the names are the same because the new leaders of the rebellion (human leaders, that is) come from the same northern regions of Eurasia as the leaders of that earlier invasion of Israel. They may even have deliberately appropriated these Biblical names as a statement of their intent to avenge the defeat and death of their ancestors when they invaded Israel.

Defender: Rev 20:8 - sand of the sea The world population, with the benefit of increased longevity, as well as an almost perfect environment and societal conditions, will grow to fulfill ...

The world population, with the benefit of increased longevity, as well as an almost perfect environment and societal conditions, will grow to fulfill God's ancient command to "fill the earth" (Gen 9:1, Gen 9:7). But it is a sad commentary on the perverse depravity of human nature that, even after a thousand years of peace and prosperity, and even while experiencing the personal reign of Christ on the earth, men will still follow Satan in great multitudes when they have a chance. Truly, the human heart in its natural state is "deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked" (Jer 17:9)."

Defender: Rev 20:9 - camp of the saints "The saints" here are probably not just the Israelites in Jerusalem but also the resurrected and raptured saints of the previous ages, all coming to r...

"The saints" here are probably not just the Israelites in Jerusalem but also the resurrected and raptured saints of the previous ages, all coming to rally around "the beloved city" as the hosts of darkness and their multitudes of human followers surround them for one last desperate attempt to defeat and dethrone the Lord Jesus Christ. This will be impossible, for God (not Satan) is the Creator of all things, and this time His patience and longsuffering will finally reach an end. In a foretaste of the lake of fire which the rebels will all soon inhabit, God will send from heaven a vast ring of fire around the holy city which will quickly "devour the adversaries" (Heb 10:27), "for our God is a consuming fire" (Heb 12:29)."

Defender: Rev 20:10 - brimstone "Brimstone" comes from the Old English name for sulphur ("brim" developed into "burn," sulphur being the "stone" that burns). When sulphur ignites, it...

"Brimstone" comes from the Old English name for sulphur ("brim" developed into "burn," sulphur being the "stone" that burns). When sulphur ignites, it burns with a very bright light and with the noxious odor of sulphur dioxide. This smell was noted by the ancients both in lightning storms and volcanic storms, so both came to be known as "fire from God," hence the Greek words for brimstone came to be theion or theiodes. Whether or not the lake of fire and brimstone will actually incorporate burning sulphur, the use of the term indicates that the fiery lake will always be associated with the fiery judgment of a holy God on willful sin.

Defender: Rev 20:10 - are The beast and the false prophet are thus still imprisoned in the lake of fire over a thousand years after first being cast into it (Rev 19:20). These ...

The beast and the false prophet are thus still imprisoned in the lake of fire over a thousand years after first being cast into it (Rev 19:20). These two are actually Satanically-controlled men. Presumably their human bodies will be consumed by the flames when they are first cast into the fire, but their souls will still be there a thousand years later when Satan joins them; and they will all continue there forever. It is probable, though not explicitly so stated, that all Satan's demonic hosts will also be cast there simultaneously (Mat 25:41)."

Defender: Rev 20:11 - fled away When the fire from heaven falls on the hosts of Gog and Magog, it will apparently burn up the earth and its atmospheric heaven as well, fulfilling the...

When the fire from heaven falls on the hosts of Gog and Magog, it will apparently burn up the earth and its atmospheric heaven as well, fulfilling the prophecy of 2Pe 3:10. It will purge from all the earth the age-long effects of God's curse (the fossil remains of billions of dead creatures that had perished in the great flood and other subsequent terrestrial catastrophes). In their place will appear God's awful throne of final judgment (Mat 24:35)."

Defender: Rev 20:12 - the dead The "dead" here are the unsaved dead, their bodies having been raised in the second resurrection in order to stand before God in judgment. Whether tho...

The "dead" here are the unsaved dead, their bodies having been raised in the second resurrection in order to stand before God in judgment. Whether those believers who are still living in the millennial earth at this time will also be raised - along with any believers who may have died during the thousand years - is not stated, but this would be a reasonable assumption since they also would have perished in the final holocaust if not before. In any case, their names would have been "written in the book of life," so they would not be judged with the others "according to their works."

Defender: Rev 20:12 - according to their works When the dead are judged according to their works, they must all be sent to hell, for "there is none righteous, no, not one" and "by the deeds of the ...

When the dead are judged according to their works, they must all be sent to hell, for "there is none righteous, no, not one" and "by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight" (Rom 3:10, Rom 3:20). Since they have rejected or ignored God's infinite grace and Christ's infinite love in dying for their sins, "there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, But a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries" (Heb 10:26, Heb 10:27). Even though God is "not willing that any should perish," His justice demands it when they intractably have refused throughout their lives to "come to repentance" (2Pe 3:9) and to personal faith in Christ."

Defender: Rev 20:13 - death and hell "Death" is often taken as synonymous with "the grave" (1Co 15:55), where dead bodies are confined, whereas "hell" (Greek Hades) is the place where the...

"Death" is often taken as synonymous with "the grave" (1Co 15:55), where dead bodies are confined, whereas "hell" (Greek Hades) is the place where the souls of the dead are confined. Multitudes of dead bodies are in the sea, rather than in the earth, especially the great numbers of people who perished in the Noahic Flood. The ashes of those bodies that have been cremated have found their way either to the earth or to the sea, and so are also included among either the dead in the sea or those in the ground. In any case, the dead bodies of the unsaved will all be raised, presumably in their previous natural condition, and reunited with their souls from Hades, to go before God in judgment."

Defender: Rev 20:14 - cast into the lake of fire All who will have been confined in death and Hades will be cast into everlasting fire, along with the devil, his angels (Mat 25:41), who are already t...

All who will have been confined in death and Hades will be cast into everlasting fire, along with the devil, his angels (Mat 25:41), who are already there, the beast and the false prophet.

Defender: Rev 20:14 - second death These will all have died physically, then been resurrected. They will die again physically (or possibly will continue in an eternal state of dying - M...

These will all have died physically, then been resurrected. They will die again physically (or possibly will continue in an eternal state of dying - Mar 9:43-48). This can appropriately be called "the second death.""

Defender: Rev 20:15 - book of life Assuming that the names of all who begin physical life are initially inscribed in the book of life, their retention there depends on whether they acce...

Assuming that the names of all who begin physical life are initially inscribed in the book of life, their retention there depends on whether they accept Christ as personal Savior after they become conscious and accountable sinners before they die. Otherwise their names will be blotted out of the book of life (see Rev 3:5, note; Rev 22:19, note).

Defender: Rev 20:15 - lake of fire The lake of fire is obviously not located on this present earth, for this present earth will have burned up and "fled away" (Rev 20:11) by this time; ...

The lake of fire is obviously not located on this present earth, for this present earth will have burned up and "fled away" (Rev 20:11) by this time; yet the lake of fire will have been burning continuously for more than a thousand years (Rev 19:20). Neither will it be on the new earth, for that will be the home of "the Lord God Almighty" (Rev 21:22), whereas "them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ ... shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power" (2Th 1:8, 2Th 1:9).

The word "destruction" does not mean annihilation, but "ruin." Thus, the unsaved will be moved far away from the presence of the Lord, and there they will remain forever. They may well be translated to a far distant dark star, for a star is itself a lake of fire, and the lost are said to be like "wandering stars, to whom is reserved the blackness of darkness for ever" (Jud 1:13). There they must continue in their sinful state, hating God, never resting, without light, without love, without peace, without anything that speaks of the presence or power of God, forever.

Lest anyone think this fate too severe, there are several factors to remember. In the first place, those who have rejected God's presence in their lives while they were on earth will be less miserable in hell than if they were forced to be in His presence in heaven forever. Secondly, only infinite punishment is fitting for those who have rejected or ignored the infinite love and infinite suffering of the Son of God for them. Finally, they must exist forever somewhere since they had been created in God's image which by definition is eternal."

TSK: Rev 20:1 - I saw // having // a great I saw : Rev 10:1, Rev 18:1 having : Rev 1:18, Rev 9:1, Rev 9:2; Luk 8:31 a great : 2Pe 2:4; Jud 1:6

I saw : Rev 10:1, Rev 18:1

having : Rev 1:18, Rev 9:1, Rev 9:2; Luk 8:31

a great : 2Pe 2:4; Jud 1:6

TSK: Rev 20:2 - he laid // the dragon he laid : Gen 3:15; Isa 27:1, Isa 49:24, Isa 49:25; Mat 8:29, Mat 19:29; Mar 5:7; Luk 11:20-22; Joh 12:31, Joh 16:11; Rom 16:20; Heb 2:14 the dragon :...

TSK: Rev 20:3 - cast // and set // should deceive // the thousand // and after cast : Rev 20:1, Rev 17:8 and set : Dan 6:17; Mat 27:66 should deceive : Rev 20:8, Rev 12:9, Rev 13:14, Rev 16:14-16, Rev 17:2; Mat 24:24; 2Co 11:3, 2...

TSK: Rev 20:4 - thrones // the souls // beheaded // the witness // and which // and they thrones : Dan 7:9, Dan 7:18, Dan 7:22, Dan 7:27; Mat 19:28; Luk 22:30; 1Co 6:2, 1Co 6:3 the souls : Rev 6:9; Mal 4:5; Mat 17:10-13; Mar 9:11; Luk 1:17...

TSK: Rev 20:5 - the rest // This the rest : Rev 20:8, Rev 20:9, Rev 19:20,Rev 19:21 This : Rev 11:11, Rev 11:15; Eze 37:2-14; Rom 11:15

TSK: Rev 20:6 - Blessed // the second // priests // and shall Blessed : Rev 20:5, Rev 14:13, Rev 22:7; Isa 4:3; Dan 12:12; Luk 14:15 the second : Rev 20:14, Rev 2:11, Rev 21:8 priests : Rev 1:6, Rev 5:10; Isa 61:...

TSK: Rev 20:7 - -- Rev 20:2

TSK: Rev 20:8 - to deceive // Gog // to gather // the number to deceive : Rev 20:3, Rev 20:10 Gog : Ezek. 38:1-39:29 to gather : Rev 16:14 the number : Jdg 7:12; 1Sa 13:5; 1Ki 4:20; Isa 10:22; Jer 33:22; Heb 11:...

to deceive : Rev 20:3, Rev 20:10

Gog : Ezek. 38:1-39:29

to gather : Rev 16:14

the number : Jdg 7:12; 1Sa 13:5; 1Ki 4:20; Isa 10:22; Jer 33:22; Heb 11:12

TSK: Rev 20:9 - went // and compassed // the camp // and fire went : Isa 8:7, Isa 8:8; Eze 38:9, Eze 38:16; Hab 1:6 and compassed : 2Ki 6:15; Mic 2:13; Mat 16:16-18; Luk 19:43, Luk 21:20 the camp : Psa 48:1-3, Ps...

TSK: Rev 20:10 - the devil // the lake // tormented the devil : Rev 20:2, Rev 20:3, Rev 20:8 the lake : Rev 20:14, Rev 20:15, Rev 19:20 tormented : Rev 14:10; Mat 25:41, Mat 25:46

TSK: Rev 20:11 - I saw // from // and there I saw : Rev 20:2, Rev 19:11; Gen 18:25; Psa 9:7, Psa 9:8, Psa 14:6, Psa 14:7, Psa 47:8, Psa 89:14, Psa 97:2; Mat 25:31; Act 17:30,Act 17:31; Rom 2:5 f...

TSK: Rev 20:12 - I saw // small // stand // the books // and another // according I saw : Rev 20:11; Dan 12:2; Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29, Joh 11:25, Joh 11:26; Act 24:15; 1Co 15:21-23; 1Th 4:15-17 small : Rev 19:5 stand : Rom 14:10-12; 1Co...

TSK: Rev 20:13 - the sea // and death // hell // and they the sea : Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29 and death : Rev 20:14, Rev 6:8; Hos 13:14; 1Co 15:50-58 hell : or, the grave, 1Co 15:55 *marg. and they : Rev 20:12

the sea : Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29

and death : Rev 20:14, Rev 6:8; Hos 13:14; 1Co 15:50-58

hell : or, the grave, 1Co 15:55 *marg.

and they : Rev 20:12

TSK: Rev 20:14 - death // This death : Rev 19:20; Hos 13:14; 1Co 15:26, 1Co 15:53 This : Rev 20:6, Rev 21:8

TSK: Rev 20:15 - whosoever // was cast whosoever : Mar 16:16; Joh 3:18, Joh 3:19, Joh 3:36, Joh 14:6; Act 4:12; Heb 2:3, Heb 12:25; 1Jo 5:11, 1Jo 5:12 was cast : Rev 19:20; Mat 25:41; Mar 9...

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Poole: Rev 20:1 - Chapter Introduction Rev 20:1-3 Satan bound for a thousand years. Rev 20:4-6 The first resurrection. Rev 20:7-9 Satan again let loose gathereth Gog and Magog to b...

Rev 20:1-3 Satan bound for a thousand years.

Rev 20:4-6 The first resurrection.

Rev 20:7-9 Satan again let loose gathereth Gog and Magog to

battle, who are devoured with fire.

Rev 20:10 The devil cast into the lake of fire and brimstone.

Rev 20:11-15 The general resurrection, and last judgment.

Chapter Introduction

We are now come to the darkest part of the whole revelation. What is meant by the thousand years, and the first and second resurrection, and by Gog and Magog, Rev 20:1-15 , or the new heavens and new earth, and the Jerusalem coming down from heaven, discoursed on, Rev 21:1-22:21 , is very hard to say, and possibly much more cannot with any probability be conjectured as to them than hath been already said. I shall only tell my reader that, leaving him to judge what is most probable, and leaving it to he Divine Providence to give us a certain and infallible exposition of what is contained in these last three chapters.

The description of this angel can agree to none but Christ, or one that exerciseth a power by delegation from him: for, Rev 1:18 , it is he who hath the power of hell and death; and it is he who alone is stronger than the devil, which must be supposed to him that binds him, or we must think the devil much tamer than he is.

Poole: Rev 20:2 - old serpent // the devil // And bound him // A thousand years There can be no question who is meant by the dragon here, and the old serpent for the Holy Ghost interpreteth it, the devil the enemy of mankin...

There can be no question who is meant by the dragon here, and the

old serpent for the Holy Ghost interpreteth it,

the devil the enemy of mankind.

And bound him: by binding also is meant the restraint of the devil in the exercise of his natural power, or the power God had before allowed him to exercise for the trial of his saints’ faith and patience. The devil is restrained in the restraint of his instruments. It is expounded, Rev 20:3 , that he should deceive the nations no more.

A thousand years: whether these thousand years signify that certain space of time, or a long time, I cannot say; only it is probable, that if it signifies an uncertain, indefinite time, it is much longer time than any other period of time spoken of, (which have all hitherto been expressed by days, or months, or a lesser number of years), by far. But what the complexion of the world shall be during this long time, or when the epocha or beginning of these thousand years shall be, are both of them very hard questions. It was the opinion of the old Chiliasts or Millenaries, that six thousand years of the world should pass, then antichrist with all wicked men should be destroyed; that in the next thousand years Christ should appear, and be upon the earth, ruling it with his saints; after which there would be another time of sharp persecution, according to what is said, Rev 20:7 , to which Christ should put a period by coming to the last judgment. It is plain that (if most men be not mistaken, that have counted the years from the beginning of the world) these men were mistaken; for more than six thousand years are passed, yet there is no such thing come to pass. Divers very good and learned men (leaving out the age of the world when these thousand years should begin) have judged, that after the great battle in Armageddon, (which, as was said before, shall be after the ruin both of Turk and pope), the church of Christ shall for a thousand years enjoy great quiet under the conduct of Christ, (as some think), who in these thousand years shall personally be upon the earth; or of such a godly magistracy in all places of the church, as shall do and execute what Christ would have done and executed. After which the enemies of the church (mentioned here, Rev 20:8 , under the notions of Gog and Magog ) shall rally again, but be destroyed by Christ appearing to the last judgment. This opinion hath had, and hath, many learned and grave patrons. I shall only say this, that I do not understand what these thousand years mean, if they do not denote a serene and calm time for the church of God, of long continuance, before the day of judgment. Whether Christ shall be here personally, or none but saints shall be in places of power, or the power of Christ only shall be seen in so ruling and governing all magistrates, that they shall not, as before, impose superstition and idolatry, and kill or ruin men for not complying with them; but the servants of God, that worship him in spirit and truth, shall under magistrates live quiet and peaceable lives in all godliness and honesty; I cannot determine; but do in my own thoughts most incline to the last, that the thousand years only denote a large space of time, (as yet at a great distance), when the church of God shall freely enjoy their liberty, without such temptations to idolatry, superstition, or other wickedness, as they have yet all along had, either from Jews, pagans, or antichrist’ s party.

Poole: Rev 20:3 - And cast him into the bottomless pit // And shut him up, and set a seal upon him // That he should deceive the nations no more, till the thousand years should be fulfilled // And after that he must be loosed a little season And cast him into the bottomless pit that is, into hell, his proper place: he shall no longer, or at least not till these thousand years be expired, ...

And cast him into the bottomless pit that is, into hell, his proper place: he shall no longer, or at least not till these thousand years be expired, exercise his power, as prince of the power of the air, Eph 2:2 , or compassing the earth, and walking up and down in it, as Job 1:7 .

And shut him up, and set a seal upon him he shall be restrained as much as one shut up in prison, whose doors are sealed up.

That he should deceive the nations no more, till the thousand years should be fulfilled that till this time of God’ s counsel for the quiet of his church be run out, he shall not deceive people by his old arts.

And after that he must be loosed a little season and after that he shall have a liberty again as Rev 20:7for a little time.

Poole: Rev 20:4 - And they sat upon them // And judgment was given unto them // live and reign with Christ a thousand years This is a very difficult text. Thrones are places of dignity and judicature; they seem here to signify only places of dignity. And they sat upon t...

This is a very difficult text. Thrones are places of dignity and judicature; they seem here to signify only places of dignity.

And they sat upon them those mentioned afterward in this text sat upon them.

And judgment was given unto them that is, a power of judgment, 1Co 6:2,3 , to be executed afterward. The persons sitting upon these thrones are described to be:

1. Such as had kept themselves from idolatry, or any compliance with antichrist, either in the form of the beast, or of the image of the beast.

2. And for that non-compliance had suffered death, and for witnessing to the truths of Christ contained in his word.

These are described as living with Christ in honour and dignity, all that space of the church’ s rest and tranquillity before expressed. Our learned Dr. More interprets the thrones and judgment, concerning those thrones or places of judicature, upon which the dragon’ s officers sat to condemn the saints of God, from whence issued the putting to death of many of the saints of God, and thinks that in this vision there is a recourse to the second thunder. Now these saints are said to

live and reign with Christ a thousand years that is, say some, in heaven, in a blessed state of glory, while the militant church upon the earth enjoyed great rest and quiet on earth. Others have thought that these should be raised from the dead, and live with Christ on earth these thousand years. Which notion (if true) will solve a great phenomenon, and render it not improbable, that the number of the saints on earth will, during these thousand years, be enough to rule the world, and overbalance the number of all the wicked of the earth. Those who think thus, judge there will be two resurrections; the first, of martyrs, which shall antedate the general resurrection a thousand years: but the Scripture no where else mentions more than one resurrection. For my own part, I shall freely confess that I do not understand this and the two next verses, nor shall I be positive as to any sense of them: for the spiritual resurrection, as to the martyrs, it was long since past, or else they had died in their sins. But of this see more in the next verse. Rev 20:5

Poole: Rev 20:5 - the first resurrection By the rest of the dead some understand all except martyrs; only that party who adhered to antichrist. Those who by the rest understand all the d...

By the rest of the dead some understand all except martyrs; only that party who adhered to antichrist. Those who by the rest understand all the dead, both good and bad, (the martyrs alone excepted), judge that there will be two resurrections: the first more particular, of those that have suffered death for Christ; the second general, of all the rest of the dead. I must confess I find a difficulty to allow this; it is too great a point to found upon a single text, in a portion of holy writ so clouded with metaphors as this, and I know no suffragan text. Those who understand by the rest of the dead, only the wicked, understand by this living again, a politic life, that is, recovered not their former power, continued as dead men, able to do no mischief, till the thousand years of the church’ s peace and tranquillity were expired. May this sense of living, and living again, be allowed, it will deliver us from almost all our difficulties about the sense of these verses; for then, by living, in the foregoing verse, is signified a political living, not a resurrection from a natural death. But then ariseth a question: If these beheaded saints did not rise from their natural death, how could they be restored to places of dignity with Christ in the church? To which they auswer: That those formerly suffering for the name of Christ, and all the saints upon the earth, are to be considered as one church; and so those formerly beheaded, lived and reigned with Christ in their successors in the same faith; that is, those alive at that time, being restored to their peace, and liberty, and reputation in the world, the martyrs, who were members of the same body, are also said to live. This appears to me the most probable sense: for that the glorified saints should leave heaven (as to their souls) to be again clothed with flesh, and in it to live a thousand years, and be concerned in the following troubles the church should meet with after these thousand years, seems to me to be utterly improbable, and to lay a foundation for so many difficult questions, as will pose the wisest man to answer to reasonable satisfaction. But yet there remains a difficulty, how this restoring God’ s holy ones to a better state can be called

the first resurrection That it may be called a resurrection is plain, as the conversion of the Jews, and restoring them to their former state as the church of God is called life from the dead, Rom 11:15 ; and the restoration of the witnesses, Rev 11:11 , is called so; though neither the one nor the other were naturally dead. Nor is it unusual in Scriptural and prophetical writings, to speak of people recovered to their former and better state, as being risen from the dead. It may be called the first, with reference to that far more excellent state which they shall be put in after the last judgment, when they shall live and reign with Christ in a more happy and glorious manner. If this may not be allowed as the sense of these two verses, I must confess this such a dusnohton , or difficulty of Scripture, as I do not understand. I shall proceed with the following verses upon this hypothesis, that this is the sense, though I dare not be positive in it.

Poole: Rev 20:6 - -- That is, they only are holy ones that shall be thus restored to share in the church’ s happiness, and such as shall not perish eternally; but t...

That is, they only are holy ones that shall be thus restored to share in the church’ s happiness, and such as shall not perish eternally; but they shall be as priests to God and Christ, glorifying him with the spiritual sacrifices of prayer and praise, and shall enjoy a quiet and honourable station with Christ upon the earth for a long time.

Poole: Rev 20:7 - -- When the long time expressed under the notion of a thousand years shall be expired, God shall take off his restraint from the devil, so as he shall ...

When the long time expressed under the notion of a thousand years shall be expired, God shall take off his restraint from the devil, so as he shall influence the wicked of the earth once more to make opposition to his church.

Poole: Rev 20:8 - And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth // Gog and Magog // The number of whom is as the sand of the sea And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth that is, the devil, being got from under the restraint of Divine ...

And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth that is, the devil, being got from under the restraint of Divine Providence, shall fall upon his old work, going about to deceive men over all the world, either tempting them to idolatry, or heresy, or lewdness of life, or (which seemeth most probable) stirring them up to one attempt more to ruin the church. These people are called

Gog and Magog about the meaning of which there are various opinions. We read of Magog, Gen 10:2 ; he was one of the sons of Japheth; see also 1Ch 1:5 ; he inhabited that country called Syria, and from thence, his posterity being multiplied, (as some think), transplanted some colonies into America. We read of Gog no where in Scripture but in Ezekiel, Eze 38:1-39:29 , where both Gog and Magog are mentioned as the great enemies of God’ s ancient Israel. Gog there, Eze 38:2 , is named as the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal. There are disputes who are meant by Gog and Magog in those two chapters. The Jewish rabbies apply the terms to some nations whom the Messiah (expected by them) shall encounter and overcome; but if we consider that prophecy as made in Babylon, and to comfort the people in that captivity, we can hardly think the enemies there intended were to appear at such a distance of time as more than two thousand years, for so many, and more, are elapsed already since Ezekiel’ s prophecy. The best interpreters therefore rather think, that Antiochus, and the race of Seleucus, (a king of Syria, who in those quarters of the world succeeded Alexander, of whom we read in the book of Maccabees), is there intended, whose ruin is there foretold, as being a great enemy to the Jews after their return from Babylon; yet some think, that in both these chapters Ezekiel prophesied of the same Gog and Magog here intended, which should be the last enemies of the church. The papists, who (according to their interest) contend for antichrist as yet to come, make Gog and Magog here to signify some king or kings that shall join with antichrist when he appeareth. Others think that Gog and Magog, in this place, signifies more generally, a colluvies, or mixed company of all wicked men, a very great multitude, who shall come from all parts, only typified by the Gog and Magog in Ezekiel, as being like them,

1. For number;

2. In their design to ruin the church, upon its restoration to a more quiet, peaceable state;

3. And who shall be ruined like them, by the more than ordinary providence of God; for the Gog and Magog mentioned in Ezekiel, are described in three texts of that prophecy as coming from the north, but these are described as coming from the four quarters of the world: this seemeth a much more probable opinion than theirs, who will have them some particular nations, whether Americans, Turks, or Indians.

The number of whom is as the sand of the sea: these enemies shall make a vast number, therefore compared to the sand of the sea; and in this they hold a proportion also with the Gog and Magog mentioned in Ezekiel, who were a great company, Eze 38:4 , many people, Eze 38:6 , covering the land, Eze 38:9 .

Poole: Rev 20:9 - And they went up on the breadth of the earth // And compassed the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city // And fire came down from God out of heaven, and devoured them And they went up on the breadth of the earth that is, in all parts of it where the church of Christ was. And compassed the camp of the saints about,...

And they went up on the breadth of the earth that is, in all parts of it where the church of Christ was.

And compassed the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city the church of God (typified by old Jerusalem, which was God’ s beloved city) they encompassed in a military order and manner, designing to destroy it, or make it subject to their lusts.

And fire came down from God out of heaven, and devoured them: thus Ezekiel prophesied of the issue of the Gog and Magog by him mentioned, Eze 38:18-22 : Eze 38:22 , And I will plead against him with pestilence and with blood; and I will rain upon him, and upon his bands, and upon the many people that are with him, an overflowing rain, and great hailstones, fire, and brimstone. The meaning is, that God would destroy them with a quick and terrible destruction, such as is that destruction of persons and places which is by fire.

Poole: Rev 20:10 - -- After this shall be the end of the world, when the devil shall be restrained to hell, the place of torments, where he shall have all heathens, and a...

After this shall be the end of the world, when the devil shall be restrained to hell, the place of torments, where he shall have all heathens, and all the rabble of antichrist, who shall be there tormented constantly and for ever and ever.

Poole: Rev 20:11 - a throne // white God now giveth his prophet a vision of the last day, the day of judgment. He seeth a throne a place of judicature; said to be great, to denote ...

God now giveth his prophet a vision of the last day, the day of judgment. He seeth

a throne a place of judicature; said to be great, to denote its gloriousness;

white to signify Christ’ s purity and holiness in his judging the world. And he saw Christ sitting upon it, and all old things passing away. Peter thus describes this flying away of the earth and heavens; The heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works therein shall be burned up, 2Pe 3:10 . All these things shall be dissolved, 2Pe 3:11 .

Poole: Rev 20:12 - And the books were opened // And another other book was opened, which is the book of life // And the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works The former verses gave us an account of Christ, the great Judge of the quick and the dead in the last day; the Lord Jesus Christ sat upon a throne o...

The former verses gave us an account of Christ, the great Judge of the quick and the dead in the last day; the Lord Jesus Christ sat upon a throne of glory, about to execute his last holy and righteous judgment. Now he describes the persons to be judged, viz. all, both

small and great

And the books were opened: to show the justice and righteousness according to which this Judge would proceed, books are said to be opened. What books? The book of God’ s law; the book of God’ s omniscience; the book of men’ s consciences. In the former is contained what all men should have done; the two latter will discover what they have thought, spake, or done in the flesh.

And another other book was opened, which is the book of life the book of life, mentioned Rev 3:5 , by which is to be understood the book of God’ s election, wherein are the names of all those who, being from eternity chosen to life, were redeemed with the blood of Christ, and afterwards effectually called, justified, and sanctified.

And the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works according to these books shall the last judgment be, Rom 2:16 , with respect had unto every one’ s work.

Poole: Rev 20:13 - according to their works By hell is meant all places where the dead are; whosoever shall be at that day in the state of the dead; the bodies of men, whether buried in the e...

By hell is meant all places where the dead are; whosoever shall be at that day in the state of the dead; the bodies of men, whether buried in the earth or sea; and the souls of men, whether they be in the place of torments or happiness, shall all be re-united to their bodies, that they may both in soul and body receive their final doom of eternal happiness, or eternal misery, accordingly as they have lived in the world; and those who shall be alive at that day, who shall be changed, ( as the apostle speaks, 1Co 15:51 ), are to be counted dead in the sense of this text, their change being instead of death to them. It is not said they shall be judged for their works, (though that as to the wicked is true), but

according to their works which is true as to the elect, who though their names be written in the book of life, yet must work righteousness; and they shall have judgment of absolution, not according to the perfection, but the sincerity, of their works, done in obedience to the will of God.

Poole: Rev 20:14 - And death and hell were cast into lake of fire // This And death and hell were cast into lake of fire there shall be no more natural death, nor any more separate state of souls, (so adhv signifies), they...

And death and hell were cast into lake of fire there shall be no more natural death, nor any more separate state of souls, (so adhv signifies), they shall all be swallowed up in the issue of the last judgment, where some shall go into life, some into eternal condemnation. Dr. More expoundeth it of the whole region of mortality being set on fire at the last thunder.

This as to the wicked of the earth, is the second death mentioned Rev 2:11 .

Poole: Rev 20:15 - The book of life The book of life: See Poole on "Rev 20:12".

The book of life: See Poole on "Rev 20:12".

PBC: Rev 20:1 - -- The angel that came down from heaven was Jesus Christ. He had "the key of the bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand." Re 20:1 The key denotes a...

The angel that came down from heaven was Jesus Christ. He had "the key of the bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand." Re 20:1 The key denotes authority. The bottomless pit is the everlasting/eternal separation from God’s presence. Bottomless indicates a place of endless duration. The great chain represents the power of Christ to restrain Satan.

475

Satan bound in the bottomless pit {Re 20:1-3}

Re 20:1-2 And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key of the bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand. And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan, and bound him a thousand years,

The main thought of these verses is the word bound. In the Greek the word translates deo, a primary verb meaning to bind (in various applications, literally or figuratively). Let us examine the following passages. " Then said the king to the servants, Bind [deo] him hand and foot." {Mt 22:13} " Saying unto them, Go into the village over against you, and straightway ye shall find an ass tied [deo]," {Mt 21:2} " Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind [deo] on earth shall be bound in heaven." {Mt 18:18} In the verses under consideration the Scripture uses another powerful metaphor. We are approaching the highly descriptive language John uses to describe the Church.[1]  We must not lose this meaning of the binding of Satan. The binding angel was one with authority: he had the key to the bottomless pit. He comes with a great chain[2] in his hand. This bottomless pit does not mean the same as does the lake of fire and brimstone. This bottomless pit is not the place of eternal punishment. Satan is bound in the sense that he can do no more than God will allow him to do. This binding of Satan is for a period of time. The terminology, a thousand years, is expressed in metaphoric language. David uses this metaphor in Ps 90:4, " For a thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past, and as a watch in the night." Peter uses this same metaphor, " But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day." {2Pe 3:8} Time is not the primary factor. Purpose has more to do with the actions of God than does a limited time. Let us examine the purpose for this binding of Satan.— Eld. Charles Taylor

Re 20:1-15 covers a vast period of time. It begins with the ministry of Jesus Christ on earth and goes to the end of time and into eternity. I don’t have all the answers to the complex issues in this portion of God’s word, but I do know according to 2Ti 3:16 this scripture should be profitable to us. I believe it is given for our encouragement as we face the devil during our pilgrimage on earth.

476

[1] Re 21:1-27 and Re 22:1-21.

[2] halusis, hal’-oo-sis; of uncertain derivation; a fetter or manacle.

PBC: Rev 20:2 - -- It should be especially noted in verse two that Satan is called by all his names: the dragon (denoting political power- Re 12:3); the serpent (the dec...

It should be especially noted in verse two that Satan is called by all his names: the dragon (denoting political power- Re 12:3); the serpent (the deceiver- Ge 3:1-16); the Devil (the accuser Re 12:10); and his proper name, Satan. The binding of Satan affected every aspect of his power and influence.

This binding of Satan is brought about through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Jesus came in the flesh "that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death." {Heb 2:14} The devil no longer occupies the same position as he did before Jesus paid the sin debt for His children. Satan has no basis to accuse us before God, because God’s justice has been vindicated as Jesus died that horrible death for us that our sins required.

It seems there is a close parallel between Re 12:7-10 and the binding of Satan in Re 20:1-15. We find that God talked with Satan in Ge 3:14; Job 1:7-12; 2:1-6 and Zec 3:1-2. Satan was "the accuser of our brethren." {Re 12:10}

But after the redemptive work of Christ "the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth and his angels were cast out with him." {Re 12:9} Then a loud voice in heaven proclaimed, "Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before God day and night." {Re 12:10} Notice in verse nine that the devil is described as one "which deceiveth the whole world...." He was cast out and down from his former position by the power of Christ. He was cast "unto the earth." {Re 12:13} I believe that this action and the binding and casting of him into the bottomless pit is one event. He is shut up and sealed in the pit to the extent that he is unable to deceive the whole world or the nations as before. However, he is still very active in the earth, causing much pain and heartache to its inhabitants, especially to the children of God. Although the devil still causes much trouble, we should be thankful that he can no longer accuse us before God about our eternal life. After viewing the complete work of Christ in redemption, Paul wrote: "Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifieth. Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us." {Ro 8:33-34} Until God created the nation of Israel, all nations were almost completely under the dragon’s power, and devil’s deception. Until the work of Christ on earth and the spread of the gospel through the power of the Holy Spirit, all nations except Israel were totally under the deception of the devil, worshipping idols. During the "thousand years" in which we are now living there has been and still is a Christian influence in many nations. This will continue to a greater or lessor extent, at least until the devil is "loosed a little season." {Re 20:3}

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PBC: Rev 20:3 - -- Jesus laid hold on this being, "cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations no more...

Jesus laid hold on this being, "cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations no more, till the thousand years should be fulfilled." {Re 20:3}

Since this chapter, as well as the entire book contains so much symbolic language, we should consider that the thousand years may be symbolic also. We have every reason to believe it is. The word thousand is used often in scripture to indicate a large, indefinite number. For example, De 7:9, we find God speaking, "For every beast of the forest is mine, and the cattle upon a thousand hills." The thousand years of Re 20:1-15 began almost two thousand years ago and has continued, I believe, until now. It will end shortly before the bodily return of our Lord Jesus Christ.

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God uses the decline of civilization to work His purpose:

The purpose of God in this binding of Satan was for a limited time. He should deceive the nations [ethnos, a race (as of the same habit), i.e. a tribe] no more, till the thousand years should be fulfilled. The nations under consideration are God’s people of every kindred, nation, or tongue. God uses the decline of civilization to work His purpose.

History records the third, fourth, and fifth centuries A.D. as the most discouraging periods in Roman history. The culture and civilized life, which had been so long in the making, slowly declined. When large estates replaced small farms, commerce and industry declined. As it became difficult for men to farm and carry on business, most of the people in the empire became discouraged with life, and cared little about their civilization or their empire. What does this have to do with Satan being bound? Allow me to quote you two paragraphs from history.[1]  " These discouraged people sought comfort in religion. But what religion? As most of them had lost faith in their own gods, they tried various cults which came from the Near East. But the more men tried other gods, the more they came to think that some one god must be greater than all others, perhaps the only god. The Christians believed in one God, and they would worship no others, not even the gods of the Roman state. For this they were persecuted. But they were so sure about their God, and their faith gave them such comfort in their troubles, that they increased in numbers and organized themselves into a Christian church." Eventually they won a great victory. The Emperor Constantine gave them freedom to worship, and their church was recognized by later emperors.

This church, as we shall see, became stronger than the Roman Empire because men came to be more loyal to their church than they were to their empire. This condition could not have been possible except the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan, had been bound for that particular time and purpose of God.— Eld. Charles Taylor

[1] Ancient and Medieval History -page 374.

PBC: Rev 20:4 - -- Our first thought would be that these thrones are within the gospel church on earth. Re 1:6 tells us that Jesus "hath made us kings and priests unto G...

Our first thought would be that these thrones are within the gospel church on earth. Re 1:6 tells us that Jesus "hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father...." Kings must have thrones. There is no doubt that God’s children are today sitting upon thrones in the church. Much judgment is to be executed by saints within the church.

I am convinced that the remainder of this verse deals with events taking place in the glory world. Therefore, it seems more likely that the thrones under consideration are located in the same sphere.  In Mt 19:28, Jesus told the apostles: "Verily I say unto you, That ye which have followed me, in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the throne of his glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel." He tells them again in Lu 22:29-30: "And I appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me; That ye may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom, and sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel." Although John saw these thrones in heaven, the judgments were pertaining to the inhabitants of the earth, the twelve tribes of Israel. This is not national Israel or just the natural offspring of Jacob. Rather, it should be understood to be spiritual Israel, made up of God’s children in every nation, kindred and tongue. {Mt 3:9; Ro 2:29} The apostles were endued with special authority by the Holy Ghost to establish the New Testament Church in its purity and to write the scriptures of the New Testament.

Jesus told Peter, and by implications the other apostles: "And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." {Mt 16:19} In a spiritual sense the apostles were sitting with Christ in His glory on thrones as they fulfilled His work regarding the church on earth. This reign continues in heaven, as the examples and writings under inspiration of God governs the church throughout all ages. I believe John saw these apostles, as it were, seated with Christ in the glory world. However, it does not seem reasonable to think they are there rendering decisions or passing judgments in person. We find that the Father has given all judgment to His Son. {Joh 5:22-27} The final judgment will be made by God without those sitting on thrones being involved. {Mt 25:34-46; Re 20:12}

Some have the opinion that that the remainder of Re 20:4 and the verses that follow are dealing primarily with spiritual matters in this present life on earth. However, I am convinced that those who "lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years" are doing so in eternal heaven. For many years, I though that those under consideration were the resurrected dead mentioned in Mt 27:51-53. I still believe it is possible they were a part of the number reigning with Christ, but they are not likely the ones that the Lord showed to John. Most, if not all, of the many that bodily arose after Jesus’ resurrection were Old Testament saints. I don’t think it would be said that those "were beheaded for the witness of Jesus." Although John only writes about those that "were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received his mark upon, their foreheads, or in their hands;" this is not necessarily all that were there. Obviously, those who had been martyred by means other than beheading were there. I believe John’s inspired word was for the purpose of bringing special comfort to the families and friends of those who had suffered a martyr’s death and for the encouragement of those who would be called upon to suffer a similar faith in the future. I believe all the elect dead in soul are today reigning with Christ. Enoch, Elijah, and perhaps those in Mt 27:52 are reigning in soul and body.

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The peace of the Church Kingdom {Re 20:4-6}

Now the saints of God were in charge. We have the words of Jesus, " And Jesus said unto them, Verily I say unto you, That ye which have followed me, in the regeneration[1] when the Son of man shall sit in the throne of his glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel." {Mt 19:28} The apostolic teaching was the judgment spoken of here. While Satan was bound there was not the opposition to the worship of God. Rather, there were those who could find no peace any other place who flocked to the Church. When God limits the power of Satan as He did during this period of time, the ideals for which martyred saints had died lived and reigned with Christ in the actions of saints during this period. These saints had chosen martyrdom rather than bow to the worship of Caesar. They had not received the mark of the beast in their foreheads, nor in their hands. They retained the mind of Christ and the work of their hands bore witness of their Godly lives. Saints of God again chose to die if necessary. God does not allow one effort to fall to the ground without bringing forth fruit.— Eld. Charles Taylor

[1] paliggenesia, pal-ing-ghen-es-ee’-ah; (spiritual) rebirth ( the state or the act), i.e. (figuratively) spiritual renovation; specifically Messianic restoration—regeneration.

PBC: Rev 20:5 - But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection. Re 20:5 The First Resurrection (Spiritual) Re 20:5 But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the firs...

Re 20:5

The First Resurrection (Spiritual)

Re 20:5 But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection.

Let us again go to the sayings of Christ concerning this first resurrection. " Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God: and they that hear shall live. For as the Father hath life in himself; so hath he given to the Son to have life in himself; and hath given him authority to execute judgment also, because he is the Son of man."{Joh 5:25-27} This is a spiritual resurrection. " The hour is coming and now is." It is put in the same realm as the words of Jesus and John the Baptist when they both said, repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Neither of these events was futuristic: they were now, in time! The execution of this judgment concerns the sinner being raised from that dead[1] state of sin and given life. Jesus bore the judgment of our sins on the Cross of Calvary. The life which is in Christ touches the dead sinner and he receives life. This is the first resurrection! Without this regeneration (spiritual resurrection), those dead in trespasses and sins will only live to experience banishment from God in eternity. They will only live in a devil’s hell.— Eld. Charles Taylor

"But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection." {Re 20:5} Since this verse states "the rest of the dead lived not again" during the thousand years, those in verse four must have been dead, but are now alive.

Those who did not live again during this period are evidently the wicked dead. {Re 20:12} They are in a very different state than the elect who are reigning with Christ. What is the first resurrection? We know it involves those mentioned in verse four. Although Jesus Christ is the first to rise from the dead in an immortal body, the text requires the first resurrection to be all those included in verse four. Many say the first resurrection is the new birth. Most certainly these saints living and reigning with Christ have been born again. But this does not seem to connect with the phrase, "But the rest of the dead lived not again." Eph 2:6 states in conjunction with the new birth that God "hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus." However, I do not believe this is what is under consideration in Re 20:4-5. Instead, it is the eternal reign of saints in glory—not just the martyrs—but all the elect. This glorious state of the elect whose bodies have died did not just begin with the thousand years, and most surely will not end at the close of the thousand years. There will be a glorious change for those whose bodies still sleep in death shortly after the thousand years are finished. The souls will be reunited with the bodies and they and the wicked dead will appear before King Jesus. After the thousand years are finished and Satan is loosed a little season, "there shall be a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and unjust." {Ac 24:15} Here we find the rest of the dead alive again in resurrected bodies, judged according to their works, {Re 20:12} and being casted into the lake of fire. {Re 12:15} "This is the second death." {Re 20:14}

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[1] Eph 2:1, "And you hath he quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins:" Eph 2:6, "And hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus."

PBC: Rev 20:6 - Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years. See WebbSr: FIRST RESURRECTION Paul wrote to the Roman brethren, " Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more d...

See WebbSr: FIRST RESURRECTION

Paul wrote to the Roman brethren, " Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him. For in that he died, he died unto sin once: but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord."{Ro 6:9-11}

The second death is eternal damnation.[1]  This will be experienced only by those who shall never know God in the realm of salvation.

The millennialist view

There are many who believe this passage to be speaking of a time when Jesus will return to restore the kingdom of David on the earth. Barclay, in his " Daily Bible Study" has this to say about the subject. " In the first resurrection only those who have died and suffered for the faith are to be raised from the dead, according to this picture. The general resurrection is not to take place until after the thousand year reign of Christ upon earth. There is special privilege for those who have shown a special loyalty to Christ."

To combat this idea, we need only to go to the words of Christ concerning the resurrection of the dead. " Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation."{Joh 5:28-29} This will be the general resurrection, of both the righteous and unrighteous. There is another resurrection, " Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God: and they that hear shall live. For as the Father hath life in himself; so hath he given to the Son to have life in himself; And hath given him authority to execute judgment also, because he is the Son of man."{Joh 5:25-27} This resurrection is spiritual in nature.— Eld. Charles Taylor

"Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years." {Re 20:6} This revelation brought and still brings great comfort and joy to the persecuted and suffering children of God. No wonder so many saints sang praises and glorified God as they suffered martyrdom at the hands of wicked men. They realized that to be absent from the body was to be present with the Lord. {2Co 5:8}

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[1] See Joh 5:29.

PBC: Rev 20:7 - And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth. Re 20:7-8 And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the f...

Re 20:7-8 And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to battle: the number of whom is as the sand of the sea.

These verses raise at least three questions which need to be answered.

(1) What is meant by the term Gog and Magog?

(2) What is this battle which is to be fought?

(3) What is the difference between this battle and the battle of Armageddon.

(1) These names Gog and Magog are used metaphorically. They are a people who no longer exist. Therefore, the names are used because of their battle orientation. Eze 39:1 tells us that Gog is the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal. Ge 10:2 gives us the origin of all three: " The sons of Japheth; Gomer, and Magog, and Madai, and Javan, and Tubal, and Meshech, and Tiras." Ge 10:5 says, " By these were the isles of the Gentiles divided in their lands; every one after his tongue, after their families, in their nations." According to Josephus they inhabited lands beginning at the mountains of Taurus and Amanus, then proceeded along Asia, as far as the river Tanais, and along Europe to Cadiz; and settling themselves on the lands which they lighted upon, which none had inhabited before, they called the nations by their own names. Those that sprang from Magog were named Magogites. These Magogites are called Scythians by the Greeks. Paul refers to the " Scythians" (descendants of Magog), " Where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free: but Christ is all, and in all."{Col 3:11} Scythia[1] was the name given by the Greeks to an ill-defined area between the Carpathians and the Don River, the western portion of which included the black earth wheatlands of the modern Ukraine. The European tribes who occupied this area in the seventh century B.C. are those to whom most properly the term Scythian is applied. The Scythians appeared in upper Mesopotamia and Syria between 650 and 620 B.C. and another force reached the middle Danube. In the last three centuries before Christ, the Scythians[2] were displaced with the Celts and Samaritans.

(2) This battle called Gog and Magog was to be a spiritual battle. It was carried out during the time when Rome had become complacent because of social conditions. These fierce calvary legions of Scythians (Gog and Magog) are representative of the Apocalyptic conflict of Re 20:8. They were so fierce and oriented in the art of desert battle by use of swift archer-calvary that they frustrated an attack of Darius in 512 B.C. They also beat off Alexander’s general, Zopyrion, in 325 B.C. No truer figure of speech could be found for this conflict than the battle of Gog and Magog. However, we know they were no longer in existence as a nation at the time John received the Revelation experience. These ungodly nations from the four corners of the world were deceived by Satan and therefore suitable for the conflict. But again we are faced with metaphoric language. The terrible persecution of the Church and the battle against the saints of God, was typical of Gog and Magog. Satan’s best tool was being employed for this battle.— Eld. Charles Taylor

"And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth." {Re 20:7-8} Remember, Satan was bound or restrained during the thousand years to the extent he could no longer deceive the whole world or nations during that time. Now those restraints are removed for a short time and his deception is rampant throughout the earth.

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[1] Zondervan’s Pictorial Bible Dictionary.

[2] Being displaced, they no longer exist as a nation.

PBC: Rev 20:8 - -- Although there will likely be physical battles taking place during the time Satan is loosed, I believe the battle described in Re 20:8-9 is primarily ...

Although there will likely be physical battles taking place during the time Satan is loosed, I believe the battle described in Re 20:8-9 is primarily a spiritual battle. The beloved city is the Lord’s church rather than the physical city of Jerusalem. Satan with his multitude of demons and wicked followers "the number of whom is as the sand of the sea" will do everything possible to try to destroy the church and stamp out the truth. But fire shall come down from God out of heaven and devour them. {Re 20:9}

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PBC: Rev 20:9 - -- They compassed the camp of the saints about. Everywhere individual congregations are gathered this force has compassed them about (360 degrees, full c...

They compassed the camp of the saints about. Everywhere individual congregations are gathered this force has compassed them about (360 degrees, full circle). The saints of God were beheaded for the word of God. They were driven from post to pillar as they sought to worship and serve the Christ who has shown them the way. He was delivered up by the Jews, but crucified by the hands of the Gentiles, The offspring of Japheth.

Here is the battle. Rome and her powers in Jerusalem sought every way possible to annihilate the Church. The beloved city is the New Jerusalem, the Church in the earth. Not only do Satan’s forces attack individual saints of God, they attack the very foundation of the Church. The belief of God’s people is being tried every day. In the day in which we live, the morals of the Church are being tried as though by fire.

Following what history calls " the reign of the good Emperors, " the Roman emperors had again instituted Caesar worship throughout the Roman Empire. There was persecution upon all who refused to worship the Caesars as gods. Upon the destruction of Jerusalem, Christians were driven into all parts of the Empire. As they refused to worship these gods, the Romans surrounded them with persecutions as never before. They literally compassed the camp of the Lord round about. For three centuries Christians had to endure persecution, not because they had a different religion, but because they would not worship as the Romans wished. They were thrown into prison, and torn to pieces by wild animals before jeering crowds in amphitheatres. Even in the face of this awful persecution the number of Christians steadily increased, because of the manner in which they bore up under persecution.

" As a result, when Diocletian[1] became emperor, probably a tenth of the people in the empire were Christians. When he commanded that all who refused to worship him should be put to death, the Christians suffered the worst persecution they had ever known. Nevertheless, the Christians were about to win a great victory." More and more they gained religious freedom.

God Intervenes by Displacing the Persecutors:

In 311 A.D., Galerius, who succeeded Diocletian as emperor, decreed that Christians should have religious freedom. In 313 A.D. Constantine became the first Christian Roman emperor. In 391 A.D. the emperor Theodosius decreed that pagan temples should be closed and that old rites and ceremonies should be observed no more. Henceforth, there was to be only one god for all in the empire, the God of the Christians.

Thus the zeal, fire and brimstone, of these Christians who were willing to give their lives for the cause of Christ, burned those who had compassed the camp of the Lord. Rome was captured by the Germanic tribes in 410 A.D. (Ancient and Medieval History by Magoffin and Duncalf). This scarlet beast upon which Jerusalem had once ridden ceased to be the power of all the earth. These Romans received the wrath of God being poured out upon them.

Let us observe some passages where God is in charge of the devouring of the wicked. " Upon the wicked he shall rain snares, fire and brimstone, and an horrible tempest: this shall be the portion of their cup." {Ps 11:6} " The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation; and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb: and the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name. Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." {Re 14:10-12}

This destruction is for all to see. There is a destruction of sin which is as a fire. As the gospel was preached throughout the known world, it burned as a fire which could not be quenched. The more Satan tried to destroy those who followed and preached Christ, the more power came of their preaching. As we consider this great empire and her sins, we should also consider our position as a nation before God. Our morals and carnal desires are parallel with these of the citizens of Rome just prior to her fall.

(3) What is the difference between this battle and the battle of Armageddon?

We have discussed the Battle of Armageddon in Re 16:1-21. The word Armageddon is taken from two Hebrew words, (1) har, a mountain or range of hills, and (2) meged, a distinguished thing; hence something valuable, as a product or fruit—pleasant, precious fruit (thing). This precisely describes the place where the victory was won by Jesus Christ on Mount Calvary[2] and the Cross (Armageddon). Now the aftermath of all this is seen by John as the destruction of Jerusalem[3] (Babylon, the great whore), as she sat on the range of hills which make up the site of Jerusalem. An eminent, distinguished, valuable, pleasant place known by the whole world as the place where God had visited His people in time past.

By these two events (actually three) we know that the battle of Gog and Magog against the early Church was not the same as the battle of Armageddon. We can say positively that God was the Victor in all of these events.— Eld. Charles Taylor

[1] Ancient and Medieval History, by Magoffin and Duncalf - page 393

[2] Armageddon -pertained to Christ and Jerusalem.

[3] Gog and Magog pertained to the persecution of th early Church. NOTE! There was a vital battle fought at Meggido. It was at Meggido that Judah was conquered by King Nebuchadnezzar. Jerusalem, along with the temple was destroyed at that time. Now at har-megged spiritual Israel is set free. Confusion no more reigns.

PBC: Rev 20:10 - -- This time Satan is not cast into the bottomless pit, but is cast into the lake of fire and brimstone. We have no biblical account of his being brought...

This time Satan is not cast into the bottomless pit, but is cast into the lake of fire and brimstone. We have no biblical account of his being brought forth again to be loosed with all of his powers. Yes, God’s people are faced with the spirit of Satan from time to time. He can never be loosed again as he was during the persecution of the early Church. We can be assured of the power of our God in this binding up of the full power of Satan.— Eld. Charles Taylor

The devil is totally defeated and is cast into the lake of fire and brimstone "where the beast and false prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever." {Re 20:10}

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PBC: Rev 20:11 - -- Re 20:11 And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for ...

Re 20:11 And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them.

After John saw the casting of Satan into the lake of fire and brimstone, he then was shown the One who sits upon a great white throne. Such is His omnipotency that nothing else exists except His righteousness. This is what is commonly termed the Great White Throne Judgment. Let us examine this in the light of Holy Scripture.— Eld. Charles Taylor

The interpretation of Re 20:11-15 must harmonize with Mt 25:31-46, and Joh 5:28-29. Good works are used as an identifying mark for the elect. Not a word is mentioned regarding the sins of the sheep in Mt 25:1-46. And there is not a single good work attributed to the goats. The Lord Jesus Christ has made His children completely righteous by imputing His righteousness to them.

I do not believe those whose names are found written in the book of life are judged according to the things written in the books. But the wicked dead will most surely be judged according to their works of evil that are contained in the books. They will receive complete justice. Their punishment will be perfectly fitting for their sins. They will be cast into the lake of fire and be punished forever.

We should be eternally grateful that ever though "we were by nature the children of wrath, even as others," {Eph 2:3} we have been saved by God’s rich mercy and grace.

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PBC: Rev 20:12 - -- Jesus taught us concerning this occasion. " Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, ...

Jesus taught us concerning this occasion. " Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation."{Joh 5:28-29} These are all the dead, small and great. This is the general resurrection. This includes all who have died naturally. Jesus simply speaks of this as a division of those who have done good, and those who have done evil. So it seems these are the same as those in Re 20:12. We are not told what these books are which were first opened. Yet it seems they contained things which are termed as works. We are very much aware of the self-exalted human nature of man. He desires to be judged on works which he has done. So the books of the law are brought out for the examination of those dead in trespasses and sins. Self-exalted human nature can find no justification of its works when judged out of the books of the law.

." .. and another book was opened, which is the book of life."

Under the old Jewish jurisprudence this would have been the book of lineage. Under the Church Covenant this is called " The Lamb’s Book of Life." The book of Jewish family lineage could be altered, because names were written therein when children were born to a family. The Lamb’s Book of Life was written from the foundation of the world. Names cannot be taken from this book. They were given to Christ as His inheritance. Their names were not written there because of any good which they had done. Rather, they were written there based on the work which Christ did. They are His inheritance! Their works are imputed as good because of the work which Christ did for them. " Then said they unto him, What shall we do, that we might work the works of God? Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent."{Joh 6:28-29} The answer of Jesus is very simple as to the nature of this work. The ability to believe on Jesus Christ is the work of God. Heaven and immortal glory cannot be gained by any work which man is able to perform.

This White Throne Judgment was not set to judge individual sins! Rather, it was set to show the love of God showered down on undeserving man. These whose names were found in the Lamb’s Book of Life entered into the joys of their Lord.— Eld. Charles Taylor

It is my belief that the "dead, small and great" in Re 20:12 states, "there was found no place for them." Notice the language: "the books were opened:" {PLURAL BOOKS} I think these "books" are the books of the Law of God, which could be expanded to include all 66 Books of the Holy Scriptures, but particularly the Moral Law (Ten Commandments). The main point of the passage is that these DEAD were "judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works."

This statement ("another book was opened, which is the book of life") is supplied to explain Re 20:15: "And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire."

This BOOK (SINGULAR) is the Lamb’s Book of Life which is mentioned elsewhere in the Scriptures as follows: Da 12:1; Re 5:6-10; 13:7-9; 17:8

Our Lord Jesus Christ bore in His body on the cruel rugged Roman Cross ALL of the sins of ALL of those whose names WERE written in {the book of life of the Lamb} slain from the foundation of the world; therefore, there is NO eternal judgment for these elect, blood bought, Children of God, EXCEPT, for the King to say unto them on his right hand, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world." But for those whose names are NOT written in {the book of life of the Lamb} slain from the foundation of the world, the SAME King will say unto them on His left hand, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels." The Lord Jesus died for ALL that were given to Him by God the Father and according to Paul’s statement "unto the church of the Thessalonians which is in God the Father and in the Lord Jesus Christ...wait for his Son from heaven, whom he raised from the dead, even Jesus, which delivered us from the wrath to come." There is a WRATH COMING, but those whose names are written in, {the book of life of the Lamb} have been delivered from that wrath.

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PBC: Rev 20:13 - -- The sea in Scripture is used often in a metaphorical sense as referring to people. We will not strive with the meaning here, because it will make no d...

The sea in Scripture is used often in a metaphorical sense as referring to people. We will not strive with the meaning here, because it will make no difference whether it is a body of water or whether it is referring to people living at the end of time as we know it. They shall each come forth at the bidding of Him who created them. However, the phrase the dead which were in it is very important. The reason is that this is speaking of all who know not Christ in a salvation sense. They have never been called out of that body of death which plunged all men into sin. They have had no part in the first resurrection (regeneration). Not only are they bound in natural death, they shall also be a part of the second death. They represent death and hell which are spoken of in Re 20:14.— Eld. Charles Taylor

PBC: Rev 20:14 - -- Why is this called the second death? Let Scripture speak for itself as the very word of God. " Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resu...

Why is this called the second death? Let Scripture speak for itself as the very word of God. " Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second death hath no power." {Re 20:6} " Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him. For in that he died, he died unto sin once: but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord." {Ro 6:9-11} By these blessed words we are assured that they, whose names are written in the Lamb’s Book of Life are alive forevermore. They have died in Adam (spiritually, first death) and have been raised (first resurrection) through Christ, and they will never experience the second death. They have passed from death unto life.— Eld. Charles Taylor

PBC: Rev 20:15 - Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost; which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour; that being justified by his grace, we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life. " Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy ...

" Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost; which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour; that being justified by his grace, we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life." {Tit 3:5-7}

All others were cast into the lake of fire. Some might question the justice of this fact. It is self-evident that the better question might be, why were there any whose names are written in the Lamb’s Book of Life? Only God has the answer to these questions.. " Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?" {Ro 9:20} —Eld. Charles Taylor

Haydock: Rev 20:2 - And bound him for a thousand years // Bound him And bound him for a thousand years. I shall give the reader an abridgment of what St. Augustine has left us on this chapter, in this 20th book de Ci...

And bound him for a thousand years. I shall give the reader an abridgment of what St. Augustine has left us on this chapter, in this 20th book de Civ. Dei [The City of God]. From the 5th to the 16th chap. (t. vii. p. 578, et seq.) he treats upon these difficulties: What is meant by the first and second resurrection; by the binding and chaining up of the devil; by the thousand years that the saints reign with Christ; by the first and second death; by Gog and Magog, &c. As to the first resurrection, chap. vi. he takes notice on the 5th verse, that resurrection [1] in the Gospels, and in St. Paul, is applied not only to the body but also to the soul; and the second resurrection, which is to come, is that of the bodies: that there is also a death of the soul, which is by sin; and that the second death is that of soul and body by eternal damnation: that both bad and good shall rise again in their bodies. On those words, (ver. 6) Blessed is he that hath part in the first resurrection; in these the second death hath no power. Such, saith he, (chap. ix.) as have risen from sin, and have remained in that resurrection of the soul, shall never be liable to the second death, which is damnation. Cap. vii. p. 580, he says that some Catholics not understanding rightly the first resurrection, have been led into ridiculous fables, [2] and this by the interpretation which they put on the thousand years; as if the first resurrection implied a resurrection of the bodies of the martyrs and saints, who should live on the earth with Christ for a thousand years before the general resurrection, in all manner of delights. This was the opinion of those called Millenarians: this, saith he, might seem tolerable in some measure, [3] if taken for spiritual delights, (for we ourselves were once in these sentiments) but if for carnal pleasures, it can only be believed by carnal men . He then expounds what may be understood by the binding and chaining of the devil for a thousand years (Cap. vii. & viii, p. 581) that the thousand years, meaning a long time, may signify all the time from Christ's first coming[4] to his second at the end of the world, and to the last short persecution under antichrist. The devil is said to be bound, that is, his power much lessened and restrained, in comparison of the great and extensive power he had over all nations before Christ's incarnation; not but that he still tempts many,[5] and raiseth persecutions, which always turn to their greater good; and that towards the end of the world he shall be let loose, as it were, for a short time, and permitted with his infernal spirits to exercise his malice against mankind, to try the patience of the elect, and to shew the power of God's grace, by which his faithful servants shall triumph over the devil. (N. B.) What St. Augustine adds divers times in these chapters: "Let no one," says he, "imagine[6] that even during that short time, there shall be no Church of Christ on the earth: God forbid: even when the devil shall be let loose, he shall not be able to seduce the Church." Cap. ix, p. 586, he expounds those words, (ver. 4-5) I saw the souls of them that were beheaded....and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years....this is the first resurrection: i.e. the first resurrection is while the devil is chained up for the space of a thousand years. He takes notice that the present state of the Church is many times called the kingdom of God, and that the Church of Christ reigns now with Christ, both in the living saints, and those who are dead, in the souls of the martyrs, and of others, who have lived and died piously, now reign with Christ, not yet in their bodies, [7] but their souls reign with him. On those words of the 4th verse: who had not adored the beast, nor his image, nor received his mark, he only gives this exposition, as agreeable to the Christian faith, that by the beast may be understood the multitude of wicked sinners in general, and the image of the beast [8] those who are of the Church in outward appearance and profession only, and not by their works. When it is said (ver. 5) that the rest of the dead lived not till the thousand years were finished: they lived not, says he, as to their souls, when they should have lived; and therefore not being happy in heaven, when their bodies shall rise, it shall not be to life, but to judgment and damnation, which is the second death . Cap. xi, he expounds the 7th and 8th verses, where it is said that Satan shall be loosed....and seduce the nations which are over the four quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, [9] and shall gather them together to battle . This, says St. Augustine, will be the last persecution at the approach of the day of judgment, which the whole city, or the whole Church of Christ dispersed through the universe, will suffer from the whole city of the devil. Neither need Gog and Magog be taken for a particular[10] barbarous people, but such as are dispersed in a manner in every nation, and who shall then break out by the instigation of Satan into an open hatred and persecution against the faithful servants of God; as it is said, (ver. 8.) they ascended upon the breadth of the earth, and surrounded the camp of the saints, where we cannot literally understand one camp, one city, or one place, but the Church every where dispersed. Cap. xii, he expounds the 9th verse, where he takes fire to signify, metaphorically, the firm resistance and constancy of the good, and the fire [11] of their zeal, which devoured as it were the wicked; or we may understand with others, the temporal fire of God's judgments in this world against the wicked, but not the last eternal fire; because the eternal fire comes not down from heaven but the wicked are cast into it below. Cap. xiii, he teacheth that the last persecution[12] of antichrist, here mentioned, shall but last three years and six months; i.e. a little while. Cap. xiv and xv, he expounds the 10th and following verse, of the devil being cast into the lake of fire, after the last persecution of antichrist. By the beast he understands, as before, the city or multitude of all the wicked; and by the false prophet, either antichrist or the outward appearance of faith in them that have none. Then follows the last judgment, where it is said that the books are opened, and also that another book was opened. By the first book, may be understood men and their consciences; and by the other book, the book of life, that[13] of eternal predestination. Thus far S. Augustine, where we see that he delivers the common Catholic doctrine, that by the thousand years, so often mentioned in this chapter, he understands all that time in which the souls of the martyrs, and of all other saints, reign happy with Christ in heaven, till after the general resurrection they receive a full and complete happiness, both as to soul and body. A false exposition of these thousand years gave occasion to the mistake, the error, and heresy of those called the Millenarians, which Mede and Dr. W. have followed. Papias, who lived soon after, or perhaps with St. John, was the chief promoter of this mistake; a man, says Eusebius, of "little judgment and capacity,"[14] who misconstrued the discourses which he heard. He was followed by divers writers in the second, third, and fourth century, who did not hold with Cerinthus and his followers, that the saints should rise before the general resurrection, and reign with Christ on earth for a thousand years in all manner of sensual pleasures; but in spiritual delights, in the city of Jerusalem, built anew after that glorious manner described in the next chapter. Now though this opinion had several considerable abettors, of which I find these seven: Papias, St. Justin Martyr, St. Irenæus, Tertullian, Nepos, (a bishop, in Egypt; in Eusebius, lib. xii. chap. xxiv.) Victorinus Petabionensis, Lactantius, and Severus Sulpitius: yet were there always other learned Catholic writers who rejected it as a fable. Of this number was Caius, a priest, at Rome, about the end of the second age [century]; Origen, in his prologue on the Canticles; St. Denys, of Alexandria, who in the third age [century] wrote to confute Nepos; (see Eusebius, lib. vii. History of the Church, chap. xxiv., who treats it as a fable ) St. Basil,[15] who calls it an old wife's tale, and a Jewish fiction, Epist. 293; St. Gregory of Nazianzus, Orat. 52; St. Epiphanius, St. Jerome, Philastrius, Theodoret, who place this opinion among the heresies and heretical fables: so that this could never be looked upon as the constant doctrine and tradition of the Church. The bishop of Meaux takes notice, that Mede either mistook or falsified the text of St. Justin,[16] who, in his Dialogue with Tryphon, holds that opinion of a thousand years reign; but adds, "I also told you, that many who are Christians of pious and sound sentiments, do not own this to be true." Thus we read in the Greek, as well as in the Latin translation: but Mr. Mede quite changes the sense, by adding a negative in this manner; but many who are not of this pure and holy doctrine, &c. We may observe that St. Justin says in the next page, that they who own not the resurrection of the body, and say that souls go to heaven without any future resurrection, are not to be accounted Christians, but are to be looked upon as Sadducees and unbelievers. Which is very true. And he adds, that he, and others who think right with him, know that there will be a resurrection of the flesh, and a rebuilding of Jerusalem for a thousand years, which St. Justin himself judge grounded on the prophets, Isaias, Ezechiel, &c. So that not to make St. Justin contradict himself, he mentions three opinions: the first is the heresy of those who absolutely denied the future resurrection of the dead: these were not Christians, but unbelievers, Sadducees, &c. The second was of those who held that the martyrs and saints should rise and reign for a thousand years in their bodies on the earth; this, which was his own opinion, he calls the right and true doctrine. But thirdly, he does not condemn those pious Christians who, as he had said before, disowned this thousand years reign, for this would be to contradict himself. (Witham) ---

In the above chapter, what man can reflect without trembling, that the devil has the rage of a dragon, the cunning of an old serpent, the malice of a calumniator, and that he is a most implacable enemy? On the other hand, what man is there that does not feel consolation in the reflection, that Jesus Christ has vanquished this savage fiend, and bound him in fetters, by limiting the exercise of his rage and malice? Some understand this chaining of the dragon of the reign of Constantine, and particularly after the defeat of Licinius; (see above, [Apocalypse] chap. xii. 18.) and the thousand years of the intermediate period between Constantine and antichrist, when the devil will again be let loose, but for a short time, only three years and a half. (Bible de Vence) ---

Bound him, &c. The power of Satan has been very much abridged by the passion of Christ; for a thousand years; that is, for the whole time of the new testament, but especially from the time of the destruction of Babylon or pagan Rome, till the new efforts of Gog and Magog against the Church, towards the end of the world. During which time the souls of the martyrs and saints live and reign with Christ in heaven, in the first resurrection, which is that of the soul to the life of glory, as the second resurrection will be that of the body, at the day of the general judgment. (Challoner)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

St. Augustine, chap. vi. Prima animarum est.

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Chap. vii, p. 580. In quasdam riduculas fabulas.

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P. 581. Utcunque tolerabilis.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Mille annos pro annis omnibus hujus sæculi posuit, &c. Chap. viii, p. 583. A primo adventu Christi usque ad finem sæculi.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Chap. viii, p. 583. Alligatio diaboli est non permitti exercere totam tentationem, &c.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Ne quis existimet eo ipso parvo tempore, quo solvetur diabolus, in hac terra ecclesiam non futuram, &c. Tales erunt, cum quibus ei belligerandum est, ut vinci tanto ejus impetu, insidiisque non possint, &c.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Chap. ix, p. 586. Quamvis ergo cum suis corporibus nondum, jam tamen eorum animæ regnant cum eo.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

P. 587. Quæ sit ista bestia....non abhorret a fide recta, ut ipsa impia civitas intelligatur, et populus infidelium contrarius populo fideli, et civitati Dei. Imago vero simulatio ejus mihi videtur....fallaci imagine Christiani.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Chap xi, p. 589. De Gog et Magog: hæc erit novissima persecutio, novissimo imminente judicio, quam sancta ecclesia toto terrarum orbe patietur, universa scilicet civitas Christi ab universa diaboli civitate.

[10] Gentes istæ, quas appellat Gog et Magog: non sic sunt accipiendæ tanquam sint aliqui in aliqua parte terrarum barbari constituti....non utique ad unum locum venisse, vel venturi esse significati sunt, &c.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Chap xii, p. 589. Bene intelligitur ignis de cælo de ipsa firmitate sanctorum, qua non cessuri sunt sævientibus, quoniam non poterunt attrahere in partes antichristi sanctos Christi.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Chap xiii. Hæc persecutio novissima, quæ futura est ab antichristo (p. 590) tribus annis et sex mensibus erit....tempus exiguum, &c.

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Chap. xv, p. 593. Prædestinationem significat eorum, quibus æterna dabitur vita, &c.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Eusebius (lib. 3, chap. xxxix) says of Papias, Greek: omikr[] on ton noun; and that he followed Greek: muthikotera.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

St. Basil (tom. 3, p. 284) says, Greek: graiodeis muthous.

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

St. Justin, (Ed. Joachimi Perionii, p. 62.) multis autum eorum, etiam qui integræ piæque sententiæ Christianæ sunt, hæc incognita (seu non agnita) esse tibi exposui. In the Greek of Rob. Stephen, out of a manuscript in the king's library, in the year 1551, p. 88, Greek: pollous d au, kai ton tes katharas, kai eusebous onton christianon gnomes, touto me gnorizein, esemena soi.

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Gill: Rev 20:1 - And I saw an angel come down from heaven // Having the key of the bottomless pit // And a great chain in his hand And I saw an angel come down from heaven,.... All Christ's enemies, and Satan's instruments being removed, the devil is left alone, and only stands in...

And I saw an angel come down from heaven,.... All Christ's enemies, and Satan's instruments being removed, the devil is left alone, and only stands in the way of Christ's kingdom; and what will be done to him, and how he will be in the issue disposed of, this vision gives an account: by the "angel" John saw, is not to be understood Constantine the great; for though he is the man child that was taken up to God, and his throne, being advanced to the empire, yet he cannot, with that propriety, be said to come down from heaven; and though he vanquished the Heathen emperors, in which the dragon presided, and cast Paganism out of the empire, by which the devil ruled in it, yet the binding of Satan is another kind of work, and seems too great for him; and besides, did not take place in his time, as will be seen hereafter: nor is an apostle, or a minister of the Gospel intended; such are indeed called angels in this book, and may be said to come down from heaven, because they have their commission from thence; and particularly the apostles had the keys of the kingdom of heaven, but not the key of the bottomless pit; and a chain and system of Gospel truths, which they made good use of for the establishing of Christ's kingdom, and weakening of Satan's, but not such a chain as is here meant; and they had the power of binding and loosing, or of declaring things lawful or unlawful, but not of binding and loosing of Satan; nor was he bound in the apostolic age: nor is one of the ministering spirits, or a deputation of angels designed; for though Christ will be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, and will make use of them, both to gather together his elect, and to cast the wicked into the lake of fire, yet not to bind Satan; but the Lord Jesus Christ himself is this angel, who is the angel of God's presence, and of the covenant; and who is in this book called an angel, Rev 7:2 to whom all the characters here well agree, and to whom the work of binding Satan most properly belongs; for who so fit to do it, or so capable of it, as the seed of the woman, that has bruised serpent's head, or as the Son of God, who was manifested to destroy the works of the devil, yea, to destroy him himself; and who dispossessed multitudes of devils from the bodies of men, and is the strong man armed that dislodges Satan from the souls of men, and is the same with Michael, who drove him from heaven, and cast him out from thence before, Rev 12:7. And his coming down from heaven is not to be understood of his incarnation, or of his coming from thence by the assumption of human nature; for Satan was not bound by him then, as will be seen hereafter; but of his second coming, which will be from heaven, where he now is, and will be local, visible, and personal: of no other coming of his does this book speak, as seen by John, or as future; nor will the order of this vision, after the ruin of the beast and false prophet, admit of any other.

Having the key of the bottomless pit: the abyss or deep, the same out of which the beast ascended, Rev 11:7. And the key of this becomes no hand so well as his who has the keys of hell and death, Rev 1:18 who has all power in heaven and in earth, and has the power of hell, of opening and shutting it at his pleasure, which is signified by this phase; see Rev 9:1. The Ethiopic version reads, "the key of the sun", where some have thought hell to be; and yet the same version renders the word, the deep, in Rev 20:3.

And a great chain in his hand; the key in one hand, and the chain in another; by which last is meant, not any material chain, with which spirits cannot be bound, nor indeed sometimes bodies possessed by evil spirits, Mar 5:3 but the almighty power of Christ, which he will now display in binding Satan faster and closer than ever.

Gill: Rev 20:2 - That old serpent // which is the devil and Satan // And bound him a thousand years By whom is meant not Paganism, for that was destroyed in the Roman empire under the sixth seal, and was the consequence of the war between Michael and...

By whom is meant not Paganism, for that was destroyed in the Roman empire under the sixth seal, and was the consequence of the war between Michael and his angels, and the dragon and his; and before this time it will be destroyed in other parts under the sixth and seventh vials, when the kings of the earth, being gathered together at Armageddon, will be slain, and the cities of the nations will fall, not only Papal, but Pagan, and Mahometan; and what will not will be converted, for before this time the kingdoms of this world will become the kingdoms of Christ: but the devil himself is intended, so called, partly because of his great power, authority, and cruelty he has exercised in the world; and because of the venom and poison of idolatry, superstition, false doctrine, and worship, with which he has infected the inhabitants of it.

That old serpent; so called with respect to his cunning and subtlety, as well as his antiquity, being from the beginning of the creation, and having as early beguiled our first parents;

which is the devil and Satan; the accuser of God and men, and the adversary of them both. The Complutensian edition and Syriac version add, "which deceiveth the whole world"; and the Arabic version, "the deceiver of the whole world"; which seems to be taken out of Rev 12:9, See Gill on Rev 12:9. Him Christ "laid hold on", and whom he held fast, as the word signifies: Christ will now take him, apprehend him, and detain him, as his prisoner; in the wilderness, Satan only felt the dint of his sword, the written word of God, and was obliged to leave him: but now he will feel the weight of his hand, and the lighting down of his arm, with the indignation of his anger; in the agony or conflict with him in the garden, he was conquered by prayer; and on the cross Christ destroyed him through death, but now he will be seized by his power, and crushed under his hand.

And bound him a thousand years, with the great chain he had in his hand: the devil is in chains now, is under the power of divine Providence, and can do nothing without divine permission; but this chain is long, and he appears oftentimes to have great liberty, and ranges about the air and earth, and does much mischief; but now he will be so bound by the power of Christ over him, that he will not be able to stir hand or foot, to disturb the saints, or deceive the nations, whether with false worship, and false doctrine, or by stirring them up to persecute the saints. So of the devil, Asmodaeus, it is said in the Apocrypha,

"And Raphael was sent to heal them both, that is, to scale away the whiteness of Tobit's eyes, and to give Sara the daughter of Raguel for a wife to Tobias the son of Tobit; and to bind Asmodeus the evil spirit; because she belonged to Tobias by right of inheritance. The selfsame time came Tobit home, and entered into his house, and Sara the daughter of Raguel came down from her upper chamber.'' (Tobit 3:17)

that the angel Raphael, ×סרהו "bound him". The space of a thousand years is not a certain number for an uncertain, or a large and indeterminate space of time, as in Psa 90:4 these years are to be taken, not indefinitely, but definitely, for just this number of years exactly, as appears from their having the article prefixed to them; and are called afterwards, no less than four times, τα χιλια ετη, "the thousand years", or these thousand years, Rev 20:3 and from the things which are attributed to the beginning and ending of these years, which fix the epoch, and period of them; as the binding of Satan, when they begin, and the loosing of him when they end, as well as the reign of the saints with Christ during the whole time; to which may be added, the resurrection of the saints at the commencement of them, and the resurrection of the wicked at the close: but the great question is, whether they are begun or not? if they are begun, when they began; and if not, when they will. Some think that they began either at the birth of Christ, or at his resurrection, or at the destruction of Jerusalem. I put these together, because they were all in one century, within the compass of seventy years, or thereabout; so that if the thousand years began at either of them, they must end in the same century, in 1100. Now though, upon Christ's coming Satan fell like lightning from heaven, and multitudes of men, possessed with devils, were dispossessed by Christ, and he that had the power of death, the devil, was destroyed by him; and upon the preaching of the Gospel by the apostles in the Gentile world, the prince of the world was cast out, his oracles were struck dumb, multitudes were converted, and churches were set up everywhere, yet still Satan was not bound: he was not bound before the death of Christ; witness the many bodies of men possessed by him; his tempting Christ himself in the wilderness; his attacks upon him in the garden, and on the cross; his putting it into the heart of Judas to betray him; and filling the chief priests and scribes with malice and envy against him, to seek his death, which they brought about: nor was he bound, so as not to deceive the Jews, either before or after the death of Christ, nor is he to this day; they were in Christ's time under the influence of their father the devil, whose lust they would do, and did, in putting Christ to death; and after his death, they were instigated by Satan to persecute his apostles in Judea, and elsewhere; and though after the destruction of Jerusalem they had no more power to act in this way, yet they had no less ill will and malice against the Christians, and are to this day filled with enmity against them, and are led captive by Satan, and given up to believe a lie, that the Messiah is not come, and to reject the true Messiah, and to expect a false one: and as for the Heathen world, notwithstanding the progress of the Gospel in it, yet for the first three hundred years Paganism was the established religion of the Roman empire; and Christianity was everywhere spoken against, despised, and persecuted, and sometimes triumphed over, as if it was extinct; and Satan could never be said to be bound, and in prison himself, when he cast such multitudes into prison, and caused them to have tribulation ten days, Rev 2:10 in which so many martyrs suffered; nor did Satan appear to be bound, with respect to the church; the mystery of iniquity began to work in the apostle's times, and there were then many antichrists in the world, deceivers, false teachers and heretics; there was a synagogue of Satan, Rev 2:9 and such a set of vile persons under the name of Christians, as scarce ever was in the world; to which may be added, the great decline of love, and other graces, and of the purity of doctrine and worship in the best churches, and the many contentions among themselves, in which Satan had a great hand, and therefore could not be bound: moreover, some hundreds of years before the thousand years ended, beginning from either of the above dates, the man of sin, the son of perdition, the pope, or western antichrist, was revealed, whose coming is after the working of Satan, 2Th 2:9 and therefore surely he could not be bound then; besides, Mahomet, the eastern antichrist, sprung up, who opened the bottomless pit, and let out the smoke of it, by the Alcoran he delivered, and the false worship he set up: nor was there anything in the eleventh century, which answered to the loosing of Satan, to the Gog and Magog army, their war with the saints, and the issue of it; nor were the nations then more deceived than they had been in some centuries past; at least they were deceived in centuries past, both by the pope and Mahomet, which they would not have been, had Satan been bound then: to which may be subjoined, that if Satan was loosed, then he cannot be said to be loosed a little season, as in Rev 20:3 in comparison of the thousand years, as that must be understood; since it is now between six and seven hundred years since, which is more than half a thousand years. Others begin these years at Constantine's coming to the imperial throne; but though there was at that time a great spread of the Gospel, an enlargement of Christ's kingdom, and a weakening of Satan's, yet Satan was far from being bound; see Rev 12:7 witness the flood of errors and heresies which he quickly brought in, as the Eutychian and Nestorian heresies, the one confounding the natures, the other dividing the person of Christ; the Pelagian heresy, which obscured the grace of God, and advanced the free will of man; the Macedonian heresy, which denied the divinity of the Spirit: and especially the Arian heresy, which was opposed to the deity of Christ, and which introduced great contentions and confusion the churches, and issued in a violent persecution of them, being embraced by the sons of Constantine: not to take notice of Julian, an Heathen emperor, ascending the throne, who by many devilish arts endeavoured to extirpate Christianity; nor what has been observed before, the rise of both Mahomet in the east, and the Romish antichrist in the west, which were both within this period; in process of time the western empire was overrun by the Goths and Vandals, and the eastern empire by the Saracens and Turks; to which may be added, the violent persecutions of the Waldenses and Albigenses, before the year 1300, about which time the thousand years must cease, according to this computation, for opposing the pope of Rome, and who were slain where Satan had his seat, Rev 2:13 and therefore not bound; nor was there anything happened in that century which might answer to the loosing of him. Others date these thousand years from the Reformation, and so not much more than two hundred of them are yet passed; but that Satan was not bound then, and is not now, is manifest. All the Popish nations have not been reformed, but still remain under the deception; and some, that have been, have revolted again; and the devil has continued to deceive the nations with that false worship, and to stir them up to persecute the reformed. Witness the burning of them here in Queen Mary's days, the massacres in France and Ireland, the present inquisition in Spain and Portugal, and the persecution of the Hugonots in France, and other Protestants elsewhere: and this is further evident from the decline in the reformed churches, both as to doctrine, discipline, and conversation; from the spread of errors and heresies of all kinds ever since, and especially in our age; and from the general profaneness and infidelity of the times, which, when considered, no man in his senses can ever think that Satan is bound; nor indeed will he be bound, or these thousand years begin, till after the conversion of the Jews, and the bringing in the fulness of the Gentiles, and the destruction of all the antichristian powers, Pagan, Papal, and Mahometan, as appears from the order of this vision, and its connection with the preceding chapter.

Gill: Rev 20:3 - And cast him into the bottomless pit // And shut him up // and set a seal upon him // that he should deceive the nations no more // Till the thousand years shall be fulfilled // and after that he must be loosed a little season And cast him into the bottomless pit,.... Or deep, into which the devils desired they might not be sent, and which they dreaded as a torment, it may b...

And cast him into the bottomless pit,.... Or deep, into which the devils desired they might not be sent, and which they dreaded as a torment, it may be, because a place of confinement, Luk 8:31 for this is called a prison, Rev 20:7 and is distinguished from the lake of fire, into which the devil is afterwards cast, Rev 20:10.

And shut him up; that so he might not rove about in the air, nor go to and fro in the earth, nor walk about like a roaring lion, seeking to affright, disturb, or devour:

and set a seal upon him; or upon the door of the pit, for further security, as was upon the stone at the mouth of the lion's den, Dan 6:17 and of Christ's sepulchre, Mat 27:66. The Jews u make mention of a stone they call "Shetijah", with which the Lord of the world "sealed the mouth of the great deep", or bottomless pit, at the beginning; but here not that, but Satan in it, is sealed. The Alexandrian copy reads, "and sealed him firmly", so that it was impossible for him to break out: the end of this apprehension, binding, imprisonment, and security of Satan is,

that he should deceive the nations no more; that is, by drawing them into idolatry, false worship, and false doctrine; and by exciting them to make war against the saints, or to persecute them, as appears from Rev 20:8 as he had done before; and it is notorious enough that he has deceived them both these ways; he deceived the Pagan nations not only before, but since the coming of Christ, to worship the Heathen deities; and the Papists, who are called Gentiles, or nations, Rev 11:2 to fall down to idols of gold, silver, stone, and wood; and the nation of the Jews to entertain a false and deluded notion of the Messiah; and all of them, in their turns, to persecute the people of God, as the Jews at the death of Stephen, and afterwards; the Pagan emperors for the first three hundred years after Christ; the Papists from the rise of the beast, who had power given him to make war with the saints, and overcome them; but now he will be under such restraint, and in such close confinement, that he will not be able to move the wicked nations to anything of this kind, as he will when he is loosed at the end of the thousand years; nor will he be able so much as to tempt any of the saints, during this term of time, nor give them the least molestation or uneasiness.

Till the thousand years shall be fulfilled; or ended, the whole space of them run out:

and after that he must be loosed a little season; a small space of time, in comparison of the thousand years; how long it will be exactly, cannot be said; and this "must" be, not because he cannot be held any longer, or through any weakness in Christ; but because of the decree of God, who has so appointed it, for the glorifying of himself, in the salvation of his people, and in the final destruction of the devil, and the Gog and Magog army.

Gill: Rev 20:4 - And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them // and judgment was given unto them // and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God // And which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands // and they lived // and reigned with Christ a thousand years And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them,.... Besides the throne of God the Father, and the throne of glory, on which the Son of God sits, and the tw...

And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them,.... Besides the throne of God the Father, and the throne of glory, on which the Son of God sits, and the twelve thrones for the twelve apostles of the Lamb; there will be thrones set, or pitched, for all the saints, Dan 7:9 who will sit on them, in the character of kings, and as conquerors, and shall sit quiet, and undisturbed, and be in perfect ease, and peace, for they that sit on them are the same persons hereafter described in this verse; for after the binding of Satan, an account is given of the happiness and glory of the saints during that time:

and judgment was given unto them; that is, power, dominion, regal authority, possession of a kingdom, answerable to their character as kings, and to their position, sitting on thrones, Dan 7:22 unless it should be rather understood of justice being done them, which does not so manifestly take place in the present state of things, and of which they sometimes complain; but now righteous judgment will be given for them, and against their enemies; their persons will be openly declared righteous; their characters will be cleared of all false imputations fastened on them; and their works and sufferings for Christ will be taken notice of in a way of grace, and rewarded in a very glorious manner. And so it may respect their being judged themselves, but not their judging of others, the wicked, which is the sole work of Christ; nor will the wicked now be upon the spot to be judged; nor is that notion to be supported by See Gill on Mat 19:28, See Gill on 1Co 6:2, See Gill on 1Co 6:3. The Jews fancy that their chief men shall judge the world in the time to come; for so they say w,

"in future time, (or in the world to come,) the holy blessed God will sit, and kings will place thrones for the great men of Israel, and they shall sit and judge the nations of the world with the holy blessed God:''

but the persons here meant are not Jews, but sufferers for the sake of Jesus, as follows:

and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God: these, with the persons described in the next clause, are they who will sit on thrones, during the thousand years of Satan's being bound, and will have judgment given them; even such who have bore witness to the truth of Jesus being the Son of God, the true Messiah, and the only Saviour of sinners, and to him as the essential Word of God, or to the written word of God, the whole Gospel, all the truths and doctrines of it; and who have been beheaded for bearing such a testimony, as John the Baptist was, the first of the witnesses of Jesus: and since this kind of punishment was a Roman one, it seems particularly to point at such persons who suffered under the Roman Pagan emperors, and to design the same souls said to be under the altar, and to cry for vengeance, Rev 6:9. This clause, in connection with the former, is differently rendered; the Syriac version renders it thus, "and judgment was given to them, and to the souls that were beheaded", &c. the Arabic version, "and to them was given the judgment the souls killed", &c. the Ethiopic version, "and then I saw a seat, and the son of man sat upon it, and he rendered to them judgment for the souls of them that were slain for the law of the Lord Jesus".

And which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands, see Rev 13:1. This describes such who shall have made no profession of the Popish religion, nor have supported it in any way; who shall not have joined in the idolatry of the Romish antichrist, but shall have protested against it, and departed from it, and shall have adhered to Christ, and to the true worship of God; see Rev 14:1. And so this, with the preceding character, includes all the saints that lived under Rome Pagan, and Rome Papal, to the destruction of antichrist, and the setting up of Christ's kingdom; not that these martyrs and confessors, or even all the saints of their times, are the only persons that shall share in the glory and happiness of the thousand years' reign of Christ, and binding of Satan; for all the saints will come with Christ, and all the dead in Christ will rise first, or be partakers of the first resurrection; and all that are redeemed by his blood, of whatsoever nation, or in whatsoever age of the world they have lived, even from the beginning of it, shall be kings and priests, and reign with him on earth, Zec 14:5 though John only takes notice of these, because the design of this book, and of the visions shown to him, was only to give a prophetic history of the church, from his time, to the end of the world; and these particularly are observed to encourage the saints under sufferings for Christ:

and they lived; meaning not spiritually, for so they did before, and while they bore their testimony to Christ, and against antichrist, and previous to their death; nor in their successors, for it would not be just and reasonable that they should be beheaded for their witness of Christ and his word, and others should live and reign with Christ in their room and stead; nor is this to be understood of their living in their souls, for so they live in their separate state; the soul never dies; God is not the God of the dead, but of the living: but the sense is, that they lived again, as in Rev 20:5 they lived corporeally; their souls lived in their bodies, their bodies being raised again, and reunited to their souls, their whole persons lived; or the souls of them that were beheaded lived; that is, their bodies lived again, the soul being sometimes put for the body, Psa 16:10 and this is called the first resurrection in the next verse:

and reigned with Christ a thousand years; as all that suffer with him will, and as all that will live godly must, and do, 2Ti 2:12 2Ti 3:12. Christ being descended from heaven, and having bound Satan, and the dead saints being raised, and the living ones changed, he will reign among them personally, visibly, and gloriously, and in the fullest manner; all the antichristian powers will be destroyed; Satan will be in close confinement; death, with respect to Christ and his people, will be no more; the heavens and the earth will be made new, and all things will be subject to him; and all his saints will be with him, and they shall reign with him; they shall be glorified together; they shall sit on the throne with him, have a crown of righteousness given them, and possess the kingdom appointed for them; they will reign over all their enemies; Satan will be bruised under their feet, being bound; the wicked will be shut up in hell, and neither will be able to give them any disturbance; and sin and death will be no more: this reign will not be in a sensual and carnal way, or lie in possessing worldly riches and honours, in eating and drinking, marrying, and giving in marriage; the saints will not be in a mortal, but in an immortal state; the children of this resurrection will be like the angels; and this reign will be on earth, Rev 5:10 the present earth will be burnt up, and a new one formed, in which these righteous persons will dwell, 2Pe 3:13 of which See Gill on Rev 21:1 and it will last a thousand years; not distinct from, but the same with the thousand years in which Satan will be bound; for if they were distinct from them, and should commence when they are ended, the reign of Christ with his saints would be when Satan is loosed, which is utterly inconsistent with it. The Syriac version very rightly renders it, these thousand years, referring to those of Satan's binding. Nor are these thousand years to be understood prophetically, for as many years as there are days in a thousand years; for as this would defer the judgment of the wicked, and the ultimate glory of the saints, to a prodigious length of time, so it should be observed, that prophetic time will now be no longer, according to the angel's oath in Rev 10:6 but these are to be understood literally and definitely, as before, of just such an exact number and term of years; see 2Pe 3:8 this is a perfect number, and is expressive of the perfection of this state, and is a term of years that neither Adam, nor any of his sons, arrived unto; but Christ the second Adam shall see his seed, and shall prolong his days longer than any of them, Isa 53:10. It is an observation of the Jewish Rabbins x, that the day in Gen 2:17 is the day of the holy blessed God (i.e. a thousand years), and therefore the first Adam did not perfect, or fill up his day, for there wanted seventy years of it: and it is a notion that prevails with them, that the days of the Messiah will be a thousand years y; and so they will be at his second coming, but not at his first, which they vainly expect, it being past: and also they say z, that in these thousand years God will renew his world, and that then the righteous will be raised, and no more return to dust; which agrees with John's new heaven and new earth during this state, and with the first resurrection: and so Jerom, who was conversant with the Rabbins, says a that the Jews expect a thousand years' reign.

Gill: Rev 20:5 - But the rest of the dead // lived not again until the thousand years were finished // This is the first resurrection But the rest of the dead,.... Meaning not the dead saints, for they will be all raised together, but the wicked dead; and not them as morally or spiri...

But the rest of the dead,.... Meaning not the dead saints, for they will be all raised together, but the wicked dead; and not them as morally or spiritually, but as corporeally dead: these

lived not again until the thousand years were finished; so that there will be such an exact term of years between the resurrection of the saints and the resurrection of the wicked; nor will there be any wicked living upon earth, or in bodies, during that time; for the wicked dead will not be raised with the saints at Christ's coming, and the wicked living will be destroyed in the conflagration of the world, and neither of them shall live again until the end of these years. This clause is left out in the Syriac version.

This is the first resurrection; which is not to be connected with the living again of the rest of the dead at the end of the thousand years, for that will be the second and last resurrection; but with the witnesses of Jesus, and the true worshippers of God living again, in order to reign with Christ a thousand years; for this resurrection is not meant of a resurrection from the death of sin to a life of grace; though the work of grace and conversion is sometimes so represented, it cannot be designed here; for such a resurrection the above witnesses and worshippers were partakers of before their sufferings, and which was antecedently necessary to their witness and worship; besides, this resurrection was future in John's time, and was what was to be done at once, and was peculiar to the commencement of the thousand years; whereas the spiritual resurrection was before his time, and has been ever since the beginning, and is successive in all ages, and not affixed to anyone period of time, though there may be more instances of it in one age than in another; nor is this ever called the first resurrection, nor can any reason be given why it should; for though one man may be converted before another, his conversion cannot be called the first resurrection, since there are many instances of this nature before, and many more after; besides, at this time, there will be none of God's people to be raised in this sense; they will be all quickened and converted before; the nation of the Jews will be born again, and the fulness of the Gentiles brought in; to which may be added, that if the first resurrection is to be understood in a spiritual sense, then the second resurrection of the wicked dead, at the end of the thousand years, must be understood in like manner: nor is a reviving of the cause of Christ and his interest here intended, particularly through the calling of the Jews, and the numerous conversion of the Gentiles; for though the former of these especially is signified by the quickening of the dry bones in Ezekiel's vision, and is expressed by bringing the Jews out of their graves, and is called life from the dead, Rom 11:15 yet that cannot with any propriety be called the first resurrection; for there was a great reviving of true religion in the time of John the Baptist, Christ and his apostles, especially after the effusion of the Spirit on the day of Pentecost, both among Jews and Gentiles; and there was a revival of the Christian religion in the times of Constantine, and again at the reformation from Popery; and as for the conversion of the Jews and the Gentiles in the latter day, that will be the last reviving of the cause and interest of Christ, which will usher in his spiritual reign, and therefore should rather be called the last, than the first resurrection; besides, this affair will be over before this time; this is signified by the marriage of the Lamb in the preceding chapter; and the kingdoms of the world will become Christ's under the seventh trumpet, and both will be in the spiritual reign: moreover, this does by no means agree with the character of the persons who shall share in this resurrection, they are such who shall have lived and suffered, at least many of them, under Rome Pagan and Papal, Rev 20:4 and therefore can never be understood of Jews and Gentiles in the latter day, when neither one nor other shall be any more. To which may be subjoined, that if this was the sense, then this cause must revive also among the wicked at the end of the thousand years, whereas when they are raised, they will attempt the very reverse. It remains then, that by this first resurrection must be meant a corporeal one; for as some of those that will live again were corporeally beheaded, and all of them corporeally died, they will be corporeally raised again; and in such sense will the rest of the dead be raised at the end of these years; with respect to which this is properly called the first resurrection; it is the first in time, it will be at the beginning of the thousand years, and the second will be at the close; the dead in Christ will rise first in order of time; see Gill on 1Th 4:16; they will have the dominion in this sense over the wicked in the morning of the resurrection: Christ's resurrection is indeed first, but that is the cause and pledge of this; and there were particular resurrections both before and after his, but they were to a mortal state; and there were some saints that rose from the dead immediately after his resurrection; but these were but few, and were designed as an earnest of this; besides, though it was a resurrection, it was not the resurrection; and it may be further observed, that the resurrection of the righteous will be the first at the coming of Christ, 1Co 15:22 there will be none then before theirs; theirs will be the first; the resurrection of the wicked, to which this is opposed as the first, will not be till a thousand years after: add to all which, that this resurrection will be, η Ï€Ïωτη, "the first", that is, the best, as the word is used in Luk 15:22 the chief, the principal; the resurrection of the wicked can hardly be called a resurrection in comparison of it, and in many places theirs is not taken notice of where this is, as in 1Co 15:12 the righteous will be raised by virtue of union to Christ, in consequence of his having the charge both of their souls and bodies, and in conformity to his glorious body, and to eternal life, which will not be the case of the wicked,

Gill: Rev 20:6 - Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection // on such the second death hath no power // but they will be priests of God and of Christ // and shall reign with him // and shall reign with him a thousand years Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection,.... This may be considered either as descriptive of the persons that shall partake of...

Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection,.... This may be considered either as descriptive of the persons that shall partake of this privilege; as that they are only such who are blessed with spiritual blessings, with a justifying righteousness, with pardon of sin, and regenerating grace, and who are sanctified by the Spirit of God; these, and these only, will be first raised, and will be called to inherit the kingdom prepared for them, Mat 25:34 or else as expressive of their happiness and holiness when raised; they shall be perfectly blessed in soul and body, and perfectly holy in both: they shall be "blessed", for

on such the second death hath no power; which is the lake of fire, Rev 20:14 the sense is, they shall escape everlasting burnings, the fire of hell, the torment and misery of the wicked; they shall be delivered from wrath to come; and as their bodies will die no more, their souls will not be subject to any sense of wrath, or to any sort of punishment: and they will be "holy"; they will have no sin in them:

but they will be priests of God and of Christ; of God the Father, and of his Son Jesus Christ, being made so to the former by the latter, Rev 1:6 or of God, even of Christ, that is, of God, who is Christ, since it follows:

and shall reign with him; they will be wholly devoted to and employed in the service of God and of Christ, and will be continually offering up the sacrifices of praise, or singing the song of the Lamb, adoring the grace and goodness of God and Christ unto them, shown them both in providence and in grace:

and shall reign with him a thousand years; this is mentioned again, partly to assert the certainty of it, and partly to point at the blessedness of the risen saints.

Gill: Rev 20:7 - And when the thousand years are expired // Satan shall be loosed out of his prison And when the thousand years are expired,.... Which are not yet expired; not in the year 1000, or 1033 or 4, reckoning from the birth or death of Chris...

And when the thousand years are expired,.... Which are not yet expired; not in the year 1000, or 1033 or 4, reckoning from the birth or death of Christ, when Paganism, which had been destroyed in the Gentile world, was introduced into the church, which bore the Christian name, through the man of sin; for this had been bringing in by degrees more or less from the times of Constantine; whence it appears, that Satan in this respect was loose before, and therefore this was not the time of his loosing; nor in 1073, reckoning from the destruction of Jerusalem, and the carrying and spread of the Gospel among the Gentiles, in which year Hildebrand came to the popedom, who may be truly called the brand of hell; Damianus, a brother cardinal, who lived at the same time with him when he was archdeacon of Rome, calls him the holy devil; he was an impostor, sorcerer, and necromancer, and by wicked arts got into the Papal chair; this pope raised the Papal power over princes to a very great height, and made the see of Rome absolutely independent, and all bishops dependent on it; he forbid bishops receiving their investiture from the emperor, or any lay person, under pain of excommunication: this is the pope that made the emperor, with his empress and child, wait three days barefoot at his gates, in the depth of winter, before they could be admitted to him; that doctrine of devils, forbidding priests to marry, was established by him; and in his days that monstrous and absurd notion of transubstantiation began to prevail, though he himself used his breaden god but very roughly; for taking it to be really God, he required an answer from it against the emperor; but it not speaking, he threw it into the fire, and burnt it. Now it will be allowed, that the devil was loose at this time, but then so he was before: there had been popes before this who were conjurers, necromancers, and had familiarity and confederacy with the devil; and near five hundred years before this time, the pope was declared universal bishop by Phocas; and the forbidding priests marriage was started in the council of Nice, and was approved of by Pope Siricius, long before this time, though it was now more firmly established; add to this, that if the expiration of the 1000 years and the loosing of Satan were at this time, he must have been loosed near 700 years, which can never be called a little season, as in Rev 20:3 especially in comparison of the 1000 years, the time of his binding; when it is two thirds of that time: nor did these years expire in or about 1300, reckoning from Constantine, about which time Pope Boniface the Eighth lived, of whom it is said, that he came in like a fox, railed like a lion, and died like a dog; upon his accession to the popedom, he instituted a jubilee, and on the first day he appeared in his pontifical habit, and gave the benediction to the people, and on the next day he clothed himself with an imperial habit, and put on a rich diadem, and sat on a throne, with a naked sword bore before him, when he uttered these words, "Ecce hic duo gladii", "Behold here are two swords", referring to Luk 22:38 which the Papists would have understood of the temporal and spiritual power which Peter and his successors are possessed of; at the same time Ottoman was crowned emperor of the Mahometan nations, who founded the Turkish empire, and spread the Mahometan religion in Asia and Greece; and by both these, great disturbances and wars were occasioned, both in the east and west: but still this does not make it appear that now was the time of Satan's loosing; since before this time the Papal power was at its utmost height, and the Mahometan religion had been hundreds of years in the world, and had greatly prevailed; and therefore Satan must be loosed before; and indeed it is in vain to seek after the expiration of these years, and the loosing of Satan, when as yet the years are not begun, nor has Satan been bound, as has been shown on Rev 20:2 but however, when they will be ended,

Satan shall be loosed out of his prison; during the thousand years he will be in a state of confinement, being bound, shut, and sealed up in the bottomless pit, which is therefore here called a prison, as is the place of damned spirits, in 1Pe 3:19 but when these will be at an end; his chain will be taken off, at least will be lengthened; the seal upon him will be broken off, the bottomless pit will be opened, and he let loose; which will be done not by himself, but by him that bound him, or by divine permission.

Gill: Rev 20:8 - And shall go out // to deceive the nations // which are in the four quarters of the earth // Gog and Magog // to gather them together to battle // the number of whom is as the sand of the sea And shall go out,.... Of his prison, the bottomless pit, and shall walk to and fro in the earth, and go about like a deceitful serpent, and roaring li...

And shall go out,.... Of his prison, the bottomless pit, and shall walk to and fro in the earth, and go about like a deceitful serpent, and roaring lion, as before:

to deceive the nations: as he had done before the thousand years began, and from which he was restrained during that time; he had before deceived the Pagan, Papal, and Mahometan nations, and now he will go forth to deceive those at this time

which are in the four quarters of the earth; all the world over: the names of which nations are,

Gog and Magog: not the same which are mentioned in Eze 38:1 though there is an allusion to them, and from thence the names are taken, and some of the figures borrowed, and design the enemies of God's people, who will be in the world at this time; so the Jews b speak of a Gog and Magog, that will come up against Jerusalem in the days of the Messiah, whom they still expect, by whom they shall be destroyed:

to gather them together to battle; not one against another, as some think, as the pope against the Turk, and the Turk against the pope, nor are they designed at all; nor "to kill them", as the Ethiopic version renders it; but against the saints and people of God, in the beloved city and camp; herein will lie his deception of them:

the number of whom is as the sand of the sea; that is, innumerable, in allusion to Gog and Magog in Eze 38:9 but the great question is, who are meant by these?--Not the Papists, the nations made drunk with the wine of Rome's fornication, the Gentiles, by whom the holy city is trodden under foot, and who will be angry when the time of avenging the saints is come, Rev 11:2 for these will be all destroyed, even all the remains of them, at the battle of Armageddon; nor is antichrist himself intended, who will be destroyed in the spiritual reign of Christ, with the breath of his mouth; and at the above decisive battle the beast and the false prophet will be taken alive, and cast into the lake of fire: nor are the Turks designed, the people of Magog being Scythians originally, as Josephus says c, from whence the Turks sprung; or Tartarinns, for Paulus Venetus d says the countries of Gog and Magog are in Tartary, called Jug and Munjug; hence some think these are the same with the four angels bound at the river Euphrates, and loosed, whose armies are represented as exceeding numerous, Rev 9:14 but though the Turkish dominions are very large, yet they do not extend to the four quarters of the world; and when the Turks were let loose, and came even into Europe, it was not against the true Christians, the camp of the saints, the beloved city, as here, but against the antichristian party; the Papists have suffered most by the incursions of the Turks, though it has not brought them to repentance; besides, the loosing of the four angels, or the Turkish nations, and their chiefs, is long before these thousand years begin; that is past already, under the sixth trumpet, whereas the seventh trumpet will be blown, and all the seven vials poured out, and the world cleared of all Christ's enemies, and after that a thousand years must run out, before this Gog and Magog army will appear: nor are the Americans the nations, here spoken of; for they are but in one quarter of the world; nor is there any reason to believe there will be there more enemies of Christ's people than in any other part, since in the spiritual reign of Christ the earth shall be full of his knowledge, and his spiritual kingdom will be to the ends of the earth: and as for that notion that those inhabiting the other hemisphere will be saved from the general conflagration, there is no reason to believe it, since the earth, and whatsoever is therein, shall be burnt up, 2Pe 3:10. Some think that the wicked living in the distant parts of the world, in the corners of the earth, are meant, who, upon Christ's coming, will flee thither, and remain in continual dread and terror to the end of the thousand years, when Satan will gather them together, and spirit them up against the saints; but this cannot be, because they will all be destroyed at the universal conflagration of the world; nor will there be any in the new earth but righteous persons: but these will be all the wicked dead, the rest of the dead, who lived not again until the thousand years are ended, when will be the second resurrection, the resurrection of all the wicked that have been from the beginning of the world; and these, with the posse of devils under Satan, will make up the Gog and Magog army: all the characters agree with them; these may be called nations, or Gentiles, being aliens from the true Israel of God, the dogs that will be without the holy city; these may be said to be in "the four quarters" of the world, since where they die and are buried, there they will rise and stand upon their feet, an exceeding great army; and as they will die enemies to Christ and his people, they will rise such; as they will go down to hell with their "weapons of war", as is said of Meshech and Tubal, the people of Gog, Eze 32:27 they will rise with the same; the grave, the dust of the earth, will make no change in their vile bodies, nor the flames of hell any alteration in the disposition of their minds; yea, as is said in the above place, they will "lay their swords under their heads", and so be in a readiness, when they rise, to make use of them against the saints, and to avenge themselves; for their envy, malice, and revenge, will be heightened and increased by their confinement and punishment in hell: nor need this be wondered at, since the devils, notwithstanding they have been so long expelled the realms of light, and have been in chains of darkness, and in expectation of everlasting torment, retain the same enmity as ever; and though the deception will be very great, to attack saints in an immortal state, who are like the angels that die not, nor will these die any more, and especially since Christ, the King of kings and Lord of lords, who rules the nations with a rod of iron, will be at the head of them; yet it need not seem strange, when they will rise as weak and feeble, and as little able to resist temptation, and as much exposed to seduction, as they were before; Satan will have as much power over them as ever; and what with their own numbers, and the posse of devils at the head of them, and especially considering the desperateness of their state, and that this is their last struggle and effort for liberty, they will animate themselves and one another to this strange undertaking. These now may be called Gog and Magog, as the one signifies "covered", the other open, or "uncovered": these being all the enemies of Christ and his people, both secret and open: and this sense well accounts for their number, being as the sand of the sea; and which the Arabic version seems to confirm, "and Jagog and Magog shall rise with him". The Jews have a notion that this deception of Satan will be at the day of judgment, which agrees with this account; for immediately upon this will follow the judgment of the wicked: they say e,

"in the day that judgment shall be found in the world, and the holy blessed God shall sit upon the throne of Judgment, Satan ×סטי ×œ×¢×™×œ× ×•×ª×ª×, "shall deceive above and below" (angels and men), and he shall be found to destroy the world, and to take away souls.''

Gill: Rev 20:9 - And they went up on the breadth of the earth // and compassed the camp of the saints about // and the beloved city // and fire came down from God out of heaven, and devoured them And they went up on the breadth of the earth,.... Either the whole earth, in the several parts of which they will be raised; or the land of Israel, wh...

And they went up on the breadth of the earth,.... Either the whole earth, in the several parts of which they will be raised; or the land of Israel, where Christ and his people will be; and so the wicked being raised, will come up from the several parts of the world, and spread themselves over the holy land; just as Gog and Magog are said to cover the land of Israel, as a cloud, Eze 38:16 and it may be observed, that the very phrase of רחב ×רצך, "the breadth of thy land", is used of Immanuel's land, or the land of Israel, in Isa 8:8

and compassed the camp of the saints about; these are the blessed and Holy Ones, who have part in the first resurrection, even all the saints; not only the martyrs under the Heathen persecutions, and the confessors of Christ under the Papacy, but all the saints from the beginning of the world; these will be all encamped together, with the tabernacle of God in the midst of them, Rev 21:3 and Christ their King at the head of them, Mic 2:13 the allusion is to the encampment of the children of Israel in the wilderness, about the tabernacle, which was in the midst of them, Num 2:2 &c. afterwards the city of Jerusalem itself was called a camp, and answered in all respects to the camp in the wilderness f, to which the reference is in Heb 13:11 and which serves to illustrate the passage here, since it follows:

and the beloved city: not Constantinople, as some have thought, but the holy city, the new Jerusalem, Rev 21:2 the general assembly and church of the firstborn, beloved by God and Christ, and by the holy angels, and by one another; and these very probably will be with Christ upon the same spot of ground where the Old Jerusalem stood, a city so highly favoured, and so much distinguished by God; so that where Christ suffered so much reproach and shame, and such an accursed death, he will now be glorified, and live in triumph with his saints:

and fire came down from God out of heaven, and devoured them; not material fire; with this the earth, and the bodies of the wicked then upon it, will be burnt at the beginning of the thousand years; but now their bodies will be raised immortal, and not capable of being consumed with such fire; but the fiery indignation of God, or his wrath, which will be poured out like fire, is here meant, which will destroy both body and soul; this is no other than the lake of fire, or second death, into which they will be cast; and which will not be until the judgment is over, though it is here related to show what will be the event and issue of their attack upon the saints: the allusion is to the fire sent upon Gog and Magog, and to the burning of their weapons, in Eze 38:22 and so the Jews g say of their Gog and Magog, that

"they shall be killed with the burning of the soul, with a flame of fire, which shall come from under the throne of glory.''

Gill: Rev 20:10 - And the devil that deceived them // was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone // where the beast and false prophet are // and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever And the devil that deceived them,.... Both before death, in the present life, by tempting and drawing them into immorality and profaneness, or idolatr...

And the devil that deceived them,.... Both before death, in the present life, by tempting and drawing them into immorality and profaneness, or idolatry, superstition, and will worship, or persecution of the saints; and after their resurrection, by instigating them to make this foolish attempt upon the saints of the most High:

was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone; the same with the everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels; this will be his full torment, in which he is not as yet; and this will not be until the judgment is finished hereafter described; though it is here mentioned to issue the account of Satan at once, and to show what will be his final state and condition:

where the beast and false prophet are; Rev 19:20 who for so many years have been companions in wickedness together; the beast being the first beast that received his power, seat, and authority from the dragon, or devil; the false prophet being the second beast, or antichrist in his ecclesiastical capacity, as the beast is antichrist in his civil power, whose coming is after the working of Satan, with signs and lying wonders:

and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever; that is, not only the devil, but the beast and false prophet, for the word is in the plural number: and this will be the case of all wicked men, of all whose minds are enmity to God and Christ, and to his people; and is a proof of the eternity of hell torments.

Gill: Rev 20:11 - And I saw a great white throne // and him that sat on it // from whose face the earth and the heavens fled away, and there was found no place for them And I saw a great white throne,.... This vision refers not to the Gospel dispensation, from the exaltation of Christ to his second coming; when he sat...

And I saw a great white throne,.... This vision refers not to the Gospel dispensation, from the exaltation of Christ to his second coming; when he sat down on his throne at the right hand of God, and was declared Lord and Christ; when there was a shaking of the heavens and the earth, a removing of the Mosaic economy, and the ordinances of the ceremonial law in Judea, and of Paganism in the Gentile world; when the Gospel was preached to all nations, and the dead in sins were quickened, and arose and stood before the throne of grace; when the books of the Scriptures were opened and explained, and the book of life was also opened; and by the conversion of some, and not others, it was known who were written in it and who were not, and men were judged to be alive or dead in a spiritual sense, according to the influence the opening of these books had upon them; and the powers of the world, comparable to a sea, and of death and hell, were not able to hold in the dead in sin, when they were called to life, with respect to whom death and hell were destroyed; nor was the Gospel the savour of death to any but to such who were not written in the book of life. This, in other words, is the sum of Cocceius's sense of this vision; but this affair will be over, and all God's elect gathered in by the preaching of the Gospel, before this vision takes place: nor does it respect the restoration of the Jews, who now are as dead, like Ezekiel's dry bones, but will at this time be quickened, and stand upon their feet an exceeding great army, and will be gathered from the several parts where they are as dead; and when it will be known by their conduct and behaviour who are God's elect among them, and who are not; which is Brightman's interpretation of the vision: but this, as we have seen, will come to pass according to the vision in the preceding chapter, before the thousand years begin; whereas this vision will not begin to be accomplished until they are ended: it is best therefore to understand it of the general judgment at the last day, which is the common sense of ancient and modern interpreters; though it seems only to regard the judgment of the wicked, for no other are made mention of in it: the "throne" here seen is a throne of judgment; it is called a "great" one, because a great Person sat upon it, the Word of God, the King of kings and Lord of lords, even he who is the great God, and Judge of the whole earth; and because of the great work that will be transacted upon it, the judgment of all the wicked; this will be the greatest assize that ever was held; it is called the judgment of the great day, and the great and dreadful day of the Lord, Jud 1:6, Mal 4:5 this throne is also said to be a "white" one; just as the same Person is said to sit upon a white cloud, and ride upon a white horse, Rev 14:14 it may be in allusion either to a white and serene cloud, or to a throne of ivory, such an one as Solomon made, 2Ch 9:17 and this is either expressive of the majesty and splendour of it, it being a throne of glory, or a glorious throne, Mat 25:31 or else it may denote the purity and justice of him that sits on it, according to which he will proceed in judgment, and finish it; his character is the righteous judge, and the judgment he will execute will be righteous judgment:

and him that sat on it; the throne was not empty, one sat upon it, who is no other than the Son of God; to whom all judgment is committed, and who is ordained to be Judge of quick and dead; and is every way fit for it, being of great knowledge, wisdom, and sagacity, and of great integrity and faithfulness, as man and Mediator, and being, as God, both omniscient and omnipotent, and so capable both of passing a right sentence, and of executing it; to which may be added, his great majesty and glory, necessary to strike an awe, and command an attention to him:

from whose face the earth and the heavens fled away, and there was found no place for them; which is to be understood not figuratively, as in Rev 6:14 where in the one place is described the destruction of Paganism, and in the other the destruction of the Papacy, and all antichristian powers; but literally, and not of the present earth and heaven, as they now are, for these will be burnt up with fire at the beginning of the thousand years, but of the new heaven and new earth, at the end of them; and the phrases of fleeing away, and place being found no more for them, show the entire annihilation and utter abolition of them; after this there will be no place in being but the heaven of angels and saints, and the lake of fire, in which are the devils and damned spirits: but though this is mentioned here, it will not be till after the judgment is over; for how otherwise will the dead have a place to stand in before the throne, or hell, that is the grave, and also the sea, give up their dead, Rev 20:12 but it is observed here, though afterwards done, to set off the majesty of the Judge upon the throne, at whose sight, and by whose power, this will be effected.

Gill: Rev 20:12 - And I saw the dead // and another book was opened, which is the book of life // and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works And I saw the dead,.... An account being given of the Judge, next the persons to be judged are described, and in this clause, by the state and conditi...

And I saw the dead,.... An account being given of the Judge, next the persons to be judged are described, and in this clause, by the state and condition in which they had been; for it cannot be thought they were dead when they stood before the throne, but were raised from the dead; for this character is not descriptive of them as dead in trespasses and sins, though they are such as die in their sins, and rise in them, who are meant, but as having been corporeally dead; these are the rest of the dead, the wicked, who lived not again until the thousand years were ended, Rev 20:5 as for the righteous, they will be judged upon their resurrection from the dead in the beginning of the day of the Lord; and will be declared righteous and blessed, and be called upon and introduced to inherit the kingdom prepared for them, which they shall have possessed a thousand years when these wicked dead will be raised: who are said to be small and great; which may refer either to their age, being children and adult persons; or to their condition, being kings and peasants, high and low, rich and poor; or to their characters, as greater or lesser sinners; and this description respects them as they are in this world, and is designed to show that no consideration whatever, of age, condition, or character, will exempt them from the general judgment. This is a way of speaking used among the Jews h, who say,

"in the world of souls, ×”×’×“×•×œ×™× ×•×—×§×˜× ×™×, "the great and the small", stand before God.''

The disputations of the schoolmen, about the age and stature in which mankind will rise and be judged, are vain and foolish: these John saw stand before God; that is, Christ, who is God and Judge of all; before his judgment seat and throne, in order to be judged; for they will stand not as ministering to him, nor as having confidence before him; in this sense they shall not stand in the judgment, Psa 1:5 but as guilty persons, to receive their sentence of condemnation. The Alexandrian copy, the Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions read, "before the throne"; the sense is the same; for if they stood before the throne, they must stand before God, that sat upon it: and the books were opened; the book of God's omniscience, which contains all the actions of the wicked, in which all their sins are taken notice of, and will now be brought to light; and the book of his remembrance, in which they are all written as with a pen of iron, and with the point of a diamond; and the book of the creatures, which they have abused, and which will witness against them; and the book of providence, the riches of whose goodness have been despised by them; and the book of the Scriptures, both of law and Gospel, as well as the book of nature, of the light of nature, see Rom 2:12 to which may be added, the book of conscience; the consciences of men will be awakened, and will accuse them, and bear witness against them, and be as good as a thousand witnesses:

and another book was opened, which is the book of life: the same that is mentioned in Rev 3:5 the book of eternal election, See Gill on Rev 3:5, See Gill on Rev 13:8, See Gill on Rev 17:8. No other use seems to be made of this book in the judgment of the wicked, than only to observe whose names were not written in it, as appears from Rev 20:15 reference seems to be had to Dan 7:10. It is a notion that has obtained among the Jews i, that

"at the beginning of the year (or every new year's day) ×’ ×¡×¤×¨×™× × ×¤×ª×—×™×Ÿ, "three books are opened", one of the wicked perfect, another of the righteous perfect, and a third of those between both; the righteous perfect are written and sealed immediately for life; the wicked perfect are written and sealed immediately for death; the middlemost are in suspense, and continue from the beginning of the year to the day of atonement; if they are worthy, they are written for life, if not worthy, they are written for death:''

and in the same treatise k, they represent God at the same time of the year as a

"King, sitting on a throne of judgment, and the books of the living, and the books of the dead, פתוחין, "open", before him:''

this with them was a prelude and a figure of the future judgment:

and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works; that is, they were sentenced to everlasting condemnation and death, according to the just demerit of their wicked works; for no other are done by wicked men, nor can any other be in the books, since they are without God and Christ, and destitute of the Spirit, have no principle of grace to act from, nor any good end in view in any action of theirs. So the Jews say l,

"all the works which a man does in this world are "written in a book", and they come into thought before the holy King, and they are manifest before him.''

Gill: Rev 20:13 - And the sea gave up the dead which were in it // and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them // and they were judged every man according to their works And the sea gave up the dead which were in it,.... Which is not to be interpreted metaphorically of the world, and the men of it, who are like the tro...

And the sea gave up the dead which were in it,.... Which is not to be interpreted metaphorically of the world, and the men of it, who are like the troubled sea; but literally of the sea, and of all such who have been drowned in the waters of it, as were Pharaoh and his host; or have died upon the mighty waters, and have been cast into them, and devoured by the fishes; and particular regard may be had to the men of the old world, drowned by the flood; these shall be raised from thence; the sea shall deliver them up: now this, and what is expressed in the next clause, will not be done after the judgment is set, the books are opened, and the sentence passed, but before all this, and in order to it, as the last clause of this verse shows:

and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them; "death", which is here represented as a person, and elsewhere as a king, reigning and having power over men, signifies death in general, and every kind of death of which men have died, whether natural or violent, over whom it will now have no longer dominion, but will be obliged to deliver up all its subjects; and "hell" signifies the grave, which will now be opened, and deliver up all its prisoners, all that have been buried in the earth; see Job 26:5 the Ethiopic version adds, "and the earth delivered up them that were dead in it": but this seems unnecessary after the former:

and they were judged every man according to their works; some to greater, some to lesser punishment, as their sinful works deserved.

Gill: Rev 20:14 - And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire // this is the second death And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire,.... Death cannot be taken properly, nor hell be the place of torment, for devils and damned spirit...

And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire,.... Death cannot be taken properly, nor hell be the place of torment, for devils and damned spirits; since that is that lake of fire, for then the sense would be, hell is cast into hell; but either by these the devil is meant, who has the power of death, and is the prince of hell, were it not that the casting of him into this lake is mentioned before in Rev 20:10 or it denotes the destruction and abolition of death and the grave, that from henceforth they should no more have power over men, nor have any under their dominion, and in their hands; and so what has been promised will now be fully performed, Hos 13:14 see Rev 21:4 or rather the wicked dead, which they shall have delivered up, and will be judged and sentenced to eternal death, Rev 20:13

this is the second death; or the destruction of the soul and body in hell, which will consist in an eternal separation of both from God, and in a continual sense of his wrath and displeasure. The Alexandrian copy and the Complutensian edition read, "this second death is the lake of fire"; and so the Arabic version, "and this is the second death, even the lake of fire"; and not much different is the Ethiopic version, "the second death, which is the fire of hell".

Gill: Rev 20:15 - And whosoever was not found written in the book of life // was cast into the lake of fire And whosoever was not found written in the book of life,.... Upon the opening of it, Rev 20:12 as all that worship the beast, and wonder after him, Re...

And whosoever was not found written in the book of life,.... Upon the opening of it, Rev 20:12 as all that worship the beast, and wonder after him, Rev 13:8 and all wicked men, everyone of them:

was cast into the lake of fire; where are the devil, beast, and false prophet, Rev 19:20. It is a saying of R. Isaac m,

"woe to the wicked, who are not written בפתק×, "in the book", for they shall perish in hell for ever and ever:''

and in the Targum on Eze 13:9 it is said of the false prophets,

"that בכתב ×—×™×™ עלמ×, "in the writing of eternal life" (or in the book of eternal life), which is written for the righteous of the house of Israel, they shall not be written.''

There seems to be some allusion in the phrase used here, and in the preceding verse, and elsewhere in this book, to the lake Asphaltites, a sulphurous lake, where Sodom and Gomorrah stood, which the Jews call the salt sea, or the bituminous lake; and whatsoever was useless, or rejected, or abominable, or accursed, they used to say, to show their rejection and detestation of it, let it be cast into the sea of salt, or the bituminous lake; thus, for instance,

"any vessels that had on them the image of the sun, or of the moon, or of a dragon, ×™×•×œ×™×›× ×œ×™× ×”×ž×œ×—, "let them cast them into the salt sea", or bituminous lake n.''

buka semua
Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Ayat / Catatan Kaki

NET Notes: Rev 20:1 The word “holding” is implied. The two clauses “having the key of the abyss” and “a huge chain in his hand” can be...

NET Notes: Rev 20:2 Here καί (kai) has not been translated because of differences between Greek and English style.

NET Notes: Rev 20:3 Or “and shut.” While the lexical force of the term is closer to “shut,” it is acceptable to render the verb ἔκλ...

NET Notes: Rev 20:4 On the use of the aorist ἔζησαν (ezhsan) BDAG 425 s.v. ζάω 1.a.β says, “of dead persons who r...

NET Notes: Rev 20:5 This statement appears to be a parenthetical comment by the author.

NET Notes: Rev 20:6 The shift from the singular pronoun (“the one”) to the plural (“them”) in the passage reflects the Greek text: The singular pa...

NET Notes: Rev 20:7 Here καί (kai) has been translated as “now” to indicate the transition to a new topic.

NET Notes: Rev 20:8 Grk “of whom the number of them [is] like the sand of the sea” (an allusion to Isa 10:22).

NET Notes: Rev 20:9 See L&N 20.45 for the translation of κατεσθίω (katesqiw) as “to destroy utterly, to consume complete...

NET Notes: Rev 20:10 The verb in this clause is elided. In keeping with the previous past tenses some translations supply a past tense verb here (“were”), but ...

NET Notes: Rev 20:11 The phrase the earth and the heaven fled from his presence can be understood (1) as visual imagery representing the fear of corruptible matter in the ...

NET Notes: Rev 20:12 Grk “from the things written in the books according to their works.”

NET Notes: Rev 20:13 Here Death is personified (cf. 1 Cor 15:55).

NET Notes: Rev 20:14 Here καί (kai) has been translated as “then” to indicate the implied sequence within the narrative.

NET Notes: Rev 20:15 Grk “he”; the pronoun has been intensified by translating as “that person.”

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:1 And ( 1 ) I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key ( 2 ) of the bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand. ( 1 ) Now follows the third...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:2 And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan, and bound him ( 3 ) a thousand years, ( 3 ) The first of which (cont...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:3 And cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations ( 4 ) no more, till the thousand ye...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:4 ( 6 ) And I saw ( a ) thrones, and they sat upon them, and ( 7 ) judgment was given unto them: and [I saw] the souls of them that were ( 8 ) beheaded ...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:5 ( 10 ) But the rest of the dead ( 11 ) lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This [is] the first resurrection. ( 10 ) Whoever shall...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:6 Blessed and holy [is] he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the ( 12 ) second death hath no power, but they shall be priests of God and...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:7 ( 14 ) And when the ( 15 ) thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, ( 14 ) The second history, of the latter victory of C...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:8 ( 16 ) And shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to battle: the numb...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:9 And they went up on the ( b ) breadth of the earth, and compassed the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city: and ( 17 ) fire came down from G...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:10 ( 18 ) And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet [are], and shall be tormen...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:11 ( 19 ) And I saw a great ( 20 ) white throne, and him that sat on it, ( 21 ) from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found n...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:12 And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before ( 22 ) God; and the ( 23 ) books were opened: and another book was opened, which is [the book] ( 24 ...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:13 ( 25 ) And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were judged every man acco...

Geneva Bible: Rev 20:14 ( 26 ) And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death. ( 26 ) The last enemy which is death shall be abolished by Chris...

buka semua
Tafsiran/Catatan -- Catatan Rentang Ayat

MHCC: Rev 20:1-3 - --Here is a vision, showing by a figure the restraints laid on Satan himself. Christ, with Almighty power, will keep the devil from deceiving mankind as...

MHCC: Rev 20:4-6 - --Here is an account of the reign of the saints, for the same space of time as Satan is bound. Those who suffer with Christ, shall reign with him in his...

MHCC: Rev 20:7-10 - --While this world lasts, Satan's power in it will not be wholly destroyed, though it may be limited and lessened. No sooner is Satan let loose, than he...

MHCC: Rev 20:11-15 - --After the events just foretold, the end will speedily come; and there is no mention of any thing else, before the appearing of Christ to judge the wor...

Matthew Henry: Rev 20:1-10 - -- We have here, I. A prophecy of the binding of Satan for a certain term of time, in which he should have much less power and the church much more p...

Matthew Henry: Rev 20:11-15 - -- The utter destruction of the devil's kingdom very properly leads to an account of the day of judgment, which will determine every man's everlasting ...

Barclay: Rev 20:1-3 - "THE CHAINING OF SATAN" The abyss was a vast subterranean cavern beneath the earth, sometimes the place where all the dead went, sometimes the place where special sinners w...

Barclay: Rev 20:4-5 - "THE PRIVILEGE OF JUDGMENT" In the first resurrection only those who have died and suffered for the faith are to be raised from the dead. The general resurrection is not to take...

Barclay: Rev 20:6 - "THE PRIVILEGES OF THE WITNESSES OF CHRIST" (i) For them death has been utterly vanquished. The second death has no power over them. Physical death for them is not a thing to be feared, for i...

Barclay: Rev 20:7-10 - "THE FINAL STRUGGLE" At the end of the thousand years the Devil is to be loosed, but he has learned no lesson; he begins where he has left off. He will assemble the nat...

Barclay: Rev 20:11-15 - "(1) THE FINAL JUDGMENT" Now comes the final judgment. God, the Judge, is on his great white throne which symbolizes his unapproachable purity. It may be that some will fin...

Barclay: Rev 20:11-15 - "(2) THE FINAL JUDGMENT" Now follows the judgment of mankind. It is the judgment of great and small. There is none so great as to escape the judgment of God, and none so uni...

Constable: Rev 4:1--22:6 - --III. THE REVELATION OF THE FUTURE 4:1--22:5 John recorded the rest of this book to reveal those aspects of the f...

Constable: Rev 20:1-15 - --M. The millennial reign of Christ ch. 20 John recorded his vision of Jesus Christ's reign on the earth f...

Constable: Rev 20:1-3 - --1. The binding of Satan 20:1-3 20:1 The first word, "And," supports the idea of chronological sequence. It implies a continuation from what John just ...

Constable: Rev 20:4-6 - --2. The resurrection of tribulation martyrs 20:4-6 ". . . it is not difficult to see why the early church understood John to be teaching a millennium i...

Constable: Rev 20:7-10 - --3. The final judgment of Satan 20:7-10 20:7 At the end of the Millennium God will release Satan from the abyss (cf. 1 Pet. 3:19). Two reasons are impl...

Constable: Rev 20:11-15 - --4. The judgment of the wicked 20:11-15 20:11 This "And I saw" introduces something else John saw in this vision (cf. 19:11, 17, 19; 20:1, 4, 12; 21:1,...

College: Rev 20:1-15 - --REVELATION 20 i. Deliverance from Babylonian Captivity (20:1-22:6) Revelation 20:1-22:5 consists of a very beautiful and very elaborate network of s...

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Tafsiran/Catatan -- Lainnya

Evidence: Rev 20:11 No hiding from God . " Whither can the enemies of God flee? If up to heaven their high-flown impudence could carry them, His right hand of holiness wo...

Evidence: Rev 20:15 Hell : It should be grievous for any Christian to make light of or joke about hell. This verse should break our hearts, drive us to weep for the unsav...

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Pendahuluan / Garis Besar

Robertson: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE REVELATION OF JOHN ABOUT a.d. 95 By Way of Introduction Difficulty in the Problem Perhaps no single book in the New Testament presents so ...

JFB: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) AUTHENTICITY.--The author calls himself John (Rev 1:1, Rev 1:4, Rev 1:9; Rev 2:8). JUSTIN MARTYR [Dialogue with Trypho, p. 308] (A.D. 139-161) quotes ...

JFB: Revelation (Garis Besar) TITLE: SOURCE AND OBJECT OF THIS REVELATION: BLESSING ON THE READER AND KEEPER OF IT, AS THE TIME IS NEAR: INSCRIPTION TO THE SEVEN CHURCHES: APOSTOL...

TSK: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) The obscurity of this prophecy, which has been urged against its genuineness, necessarily results from the highly figurative and symbolical language i...

TSK: Revelation 20 (Pendahuluan Pasal) Overview Rev 20:1, Satan bound for a thousand years; Rev 20:6, The first resurrection; they blessed that have part therein; Rev 20:7, Satan let lo...

Poole: Revelation 20 (Pendahuluan Pasal) CHAPTER 20

MHCC: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) The Book of the Revelation of St. John consists of two principal divisions. 1. Relates to " the things which are," that is, the then present state of...

MHCC: Revelation 20 (Pendahuluan Pasal) (Rev 20:1-3) Satan is bound for a thousand years. (Rev 20:4-6) The first resurrection; those are blessed that have part therein. (Rev 20:7-10) Satan...

Matthew Henry: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Revelation of St. John the Divine It ought to be no prejudice to the credit and authority of this b...

Matthew Henry: Revelation 20 (Pendahuluan Pasal) This chapter is thought by some to be the darkest part of all this prophecy: it is very probable that the things contained in it are not yet accomp...

Barclay: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) INTRODUCTION TO THE REVELATION OF JOHN The Strange Book When a student of the New Testament embarks upon the study of the Revelation he feels him...

Barclay: Revelation 20 (Pendahuluan Pasal) The Thousand Year Reign Of Christ And The Saints (Rev_20:1-15) Since the great importance of this chapter is that it is what might be called the fou...

Constable: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) Introduction Historical background The opening verses of the book state that "John" wr...

Constable: Revelation (Garis Besar) Outline I. The preparation of the prophet ch. 1 A. The prologue of the book 1:1-8 ...

Constable: Revelation Revelation Bibliography Abbott-Smith, George. A Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament. Edinburgh: T. & ...

Haydock: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) THE APOCALYPSE OF ST. JOHN, THE APOSTLE. INTRODUCTION. Though some in the first ages [centuries] doubted whether this book was canonical, and ...

Gill: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) INTRODUCTION TO REVELATION That this book was written by the Apostle and Evangelist John, is clear not only from the express mention of his name, a...

Gill: Revelation 20 (Pendahuluan Pasal) INTRODUCTION TO REVELATION 20 This chapter contains the binding of Satan, the saints' thousand years' reign with Christ, the loosing of Satan again...

College: Revelation (Pendahuluan Kitab) PREFACE This commentary on the Revelation of John has been prepared for general readers of the Bible who desire to deepen their understanding of God'...

College: Revelation (Garis Besar) OUTLINE I. PROLOGUE - 1:1-20 A. Introduction to the Prophecy - 1:1-3 B. Sender - 1:4a C. Recipients - 1:4b D. Prescript - 1:4c-5a E. ...

Advanced Commentary (Kamus, Lagu-Lagu Himne, Gambar, Ilustrasi Khotbah, Pertanyaan-Pertanyaan, dll)


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