19. The oldest manuscripts read, "Write therefore"
(inasmuch as I, "the First and Last," have the keys of death, and
vouchsafe to thee this vision for the comfort and warning of the
Church).
things which are--"the things which thou hast seen" are those
narrated in this chapter (compare
Re 1:11).
"The things which are" imply the present state of things in the
churches when John was writing, as represented in the second and third
chapters. "The things which shall be hereafter," the things
symbolically represented concerning the future history of the fourth
through twenty-second chapters. ALFORD
translates, "What things they signify"; but the
antithesis of the next clause forbids this, "the things which shall be
hereafter," Greek, "which are about to come to pass." The
plural (Greek) "are," instead of the usual Greek
construction singular, is owing to churches and
persons being meant by things" in the clause, "the things which
are."
JFB.
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