Re 16:1-21. THE SEVEN VIALS AND THE CONSEQUENT PLAGUES.
The trumpets shook the world kingdoms in a longer process; the vials destroy with a swift and sudden overthrow the kingdom of "the beast" in particular who had invested himself with the world kingdom. The Hebrews thought the Egyptian plagues to have been inflicted with but an interval of a month between them severally [BENGEL, referring to SEDER OLAM]. As Moses took ashes from an earthly common furnace, so angels, as priestly ministers in the heavenly temple, take holy fire in sacred vials or bowls, from the heavenly altar to pour down (compare Re 8:5). The same heavenly altar which would have kindled the sweet incense of prayer bringing down blessing upon earth, by man's sin kindles the fiery descending curse. Just as the river Nile, which ordinarily is the source of Egypt's fertility, became blood and a curse through Egypt's sin.
1. a great voice--namely, God's. These seven vials (the detailed
expansion of the vintage,
Re 14:18-20)
being called "the last," must belong to the period just when the term
of the beast's power has expired (whence reference is made in them all
to the worshippers of the beast as the objects of the judgments), close
to the end or coming of the Son of man. The first four are
distinguished from the last three, just as in the case of the seven
seals and the seven trumpets. The first four are more general,
affecting the earth, the sea, springs, and the sun, not merely a
portion of these natural bodies, as in the case of the trumpets, but
the whole of them; the last three are more particular, affecting the
throne of the beast, the Euphrates, and the grand consummation. Some of
these particular judgments are set forth in detail in the seventeenth
through twentieth chapters.
out of the temple--B and Syriac omit. But A, C,
Vulgate, and ANDREAS support the words.
the vials--so Syriac and Coptic. But A, B, C,
Vulgate, and ANDREAS read, "the
seven vials."
upon--Greek, "into."
JFB.
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