17. The glories of this empire shall be as wide as the world and
lasting as eternity.
therefore--Because thus glorious, the praise shall be universal and
perpetual. Some writers have taxed their ingenuity to find in the
history and fortunes of Christ and His Church exact parallels for every
part of this splendid allegory, not excepting its gorgeous Oriental
imagery. Thus, by the dresses of the king and queen, are thought to be
meant the eminent endowments and graces of Christ and His people. The
attendant women, supposed (though inconsistently it might seem with the
inspired character of the work) to be concubines, are thought to
represent the Gentile churches, and the bride the Jewish, &c. But it
is evident that we cannot pursue such a mode of interpretation. For,
following the allegory, we must suspend to the distant future the
results of a union whose consummation as a marriage is still distant
(compare
Re 21:9).
In fact, the imagery here and elsewhere sets before us the Church in
two aspects. As a body, it is yet incomplete, the whole is yet
ungathered. As a moral institution, it is yet imperfect. In the final
catastrophe it will be complete and perfect. Thus, as a bride adorned,
&c., it will be united with its Lord. Thus the union of Christ and the
Church triumphant is set forth. On the other hand, in regard to its
component parts, the relation of Christ as head, as husband, &c.,
already exists, and as these parts form an institution in this world,
it is by His union with it, and the gifts and graces with which He
endows it, that a spiritual seed arises and spreads in the world. Hence
we must fix our minds only on the one simple but grand truth, that
Christ loves the Church, is head over all things for it, raises it in
His exaltation to the highest moral dignity--a dignity of which every,
even the meanest, sincere disciple will partake. As to the
time, then, in which this allegorical prophecy is to fulfilled,
it may be said that no periods of time are specially designated. The
characteristics of the relation of Christ and His Church are
indicated, and we may suppose that the whole process of His exaltation
from the declaration of His Sonship, by His resurrection, to the
grand catastrophe of the final judgment, with all the collateral
blessings to the Church and the world, lay before the vision of the
inspired prophet.
JFB.
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