Re 13:1-18. VISION OF THE BEAST THAT CAME OUT OF THE SEA: THE SECOND BEAST, OUT OF THE EARTH, EXERCISING THE POWER OF THE FIRST BEAST, AND CAUSING THE EARTH TO WORSHIP HIM.
1. I stood--So B, Aleph, and Coptic read. But A,
C, Vulgate, and Syriac, "He stood." Standing on
the sand of the sea, HE gave his power to the beast that
rose out of the sea.
upon the sand of the sea--where the four winds were to be
seen striving upon the great sea
(Da 7:2).
beast--Greek, "wild beast." Man becomes "brutish" when he
severs himself from God, the archetype and true ideal, in whose image
he was first made, which ideal is realized by the man Christ Jesus.
Hence, the world powers seeking their own glory, and not God's, are
represented as beasts; and Nebuchadnezzar, when in
self-deification he forgot that "the Most High ruleth in the kingdom of
men," was driven among the beasts. In
Da 7:4-7
there are four beasts: here the one beast expresses the
sum-total of the God-opposed world power viewed in its universal
development, not restricted to one manifestation alone, as Rome. This
first beast expresses the world power attacking the Church more from
without; the second, which is a revival of, and minister to, the first,
is the world power as the false prophet corrupting and
destroying the Church from within.
out of the sea--
(Da 7:3;
compare Note, see on
Re 8:8);
out of the troubled waves of peoples, multitudes, nations, and
tongues. The earth
(Re 13:11),
on the other hand, means the consolidated, ordered world of nations,
with its culture and learning.
seven heads and ten horns--A, B, and C transpose, "ten horns and
seven heads." The ten horns are now put first (contrast the order,
Re 12:3)
because they are crowned. They shall not be so till the last stage of
the fourth kingdom (the Roman), which shall continue until the fifth
kingdom, Christ's, shall supplant it and destroy it utterly; this last
stage is marked by the ten toes of the two feet of the image in
Da 2:33, 41, 42.
The seven implies the world power setting up itself as God, and
caricaturing the seven Spirits of God; yet its true character as
God-opposed is detected by the number ten accompanying the
seven. Dragon and beast both wear crowns, but the former on the heads,
the latter on the horns
(Re 12:3; 13:1).
Therefore, both heads and horns refer to kingdoms; compare
Re 17:7, 10, 12,
"kings" representing the kingdoms whose heads they are. The
seven kings, as peculiarly powerful--the great powers of the
world--are distinguished from the ten, represented by the horns
(simply called "kings,"
Re 17:12).
In Daniel, the ten mean the last phase of the world power, the
fourth kingdom divided into ten parts. They are connected with
the seventh head
(Re 17:12),
and are as yet future [AUBERLEN]. The mistake of
those who interpret the beast to be Rome exclusively, and the ten
horns to mean kingdoms which have taken the place of Rome in Europe
already, is, the fourth kingdom in the image has TWO legs, representing the eastern as well as the
western empire; the ten toes are not upon the one foot (the west), as
these interpretations require, but on the two (east and west) together,
so that any theory which makes the ten kingdoms belong to the west
alone must err. If the ten kingdoms meant were those which sprung up on
the overthrow of Rome, the ten would be accurately known, whereas
twenty-eight different lists are given by so many interpreters, making
in all sixty-five kingdoms! [TYSO in DE BURGH]. The seven heads are the
seven world monarchies, Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome,
the Germanic empire, under the last of which we live [AUBERLEN], and which devolved for a time on Napoleon,
after Francis, emperor of Germany and king of Rome, had resigned the
title in 1806. FABER explains the healing of
the deadly wound to be the revival of the Napoleonic dynasty after
its overthrow at Waterloo. That secular dynasty, in alliance with the
ecclesiastical power, the Papacy
(Re 13:11,
&c.), being "the eighth head," and yet "of the seven"
(Re 17:11),
will temporarily triumph over the saints, until destroyed in Armageddon
(Re 19:17-21).
A Napoleon, in this view, will be the Antichrist, restoring the Jews to
Palestine, and accepted as their Messiah at first, and afterwards
fearfully oppressing them. Antichrist, the summing up and concentration
of all the world evil that preceded, is the eighth, but yet one of the
seven
(Re 17:11).
crowns--Greek, "diadems."
name of blasphemy--So C, Coptic, and
ANDREAS. A, B, and Vulgate read, "names of
blasphemy," namely, a name on each of the heads; blasphemously
arrogating attributes belonging to God alone (compare Note, see
on
Re 17:3).
A characteristic of the little horn in
Da 7:8, 20, 21;
2Th 2:4.
JFB.
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