9. Compare
Re 13:18;
Da 12:10,
where similarly spiritual discernment is put forward as needed in order
to understand the symbolical prophecy.
seven heads and seven mountains--The connection between
mountains and kings must be deeper than the mere outward fact to
which incidental allusion is made, that Rome (the then world city) is
on seven hills (whence heathen Rome had a national festival called
Septimontium, the feast of the seven-hilled city
[PLUTARCH]; and on the imperial coins, just as
here, she is represented as a woman seated on seven hills. Coin
of Vespasian, described by CAPTAIN
SMYTH [Roman Coins, p. 310;
ACKERMAN, 1, p. 87]). The seven heads can hardly
be at once seven kings or kingdoms
(Re 17:10),
and seven geographical mountains. The true connection is, as the
head is the prominent part of the body, so the mountain
is prominent in the land. Like "sea" and "earth"and "waters
. . . peoples"
(Re 17:15),
so "mountains" have a symbolical meaning, namely, prominent seats of
power. Especially such as are prominent hindrances to the cause of God
(Ps 68:16, 17;
Isa 40:4; 41:15; 49:11;
Eze 35:2);
especially Babylon (which geographically was in a plain, but
spiritually is called a destroying mountain,
Jer 51:25),
in majestic contrast to which stands Mount Zion, "the mountain of the
Lord's house"
(Isa 2:2),
and the heavenly mount;
Re 21:10,
"a great and high mountain . . . and that great city, the
holy Jerusalem." So in
Da 2:35,
the stone becomes a mountain--Messiah's universal kingdom
supplanting the previous world kingdoms. As nature shadows forth the
great realities of the spiritual world, so seven-hilled Rome is a
representative of the seven-headed world power of which the dragon has
been, and is the prince. The "seven kings" are hereby distinguished
from the "ten kings"
(Re 17:12):
the former are what the latter are
not, "mountains," great seats of the world power. The seven universal
God-opposed monarchies are Egypt (the first world power which came into
collision with God's people,) Assyria, Babylon, Greece, Medo-Persia,
Rome, the Germanic-Slavonic empire (the clay of the fourth kingdom
mixed with its iron in Nebuchadnezzar's image, a fifth material,
Da 2:33, 34, 42, 43,
symbolizing this last head). These seven might seem not to accord with
the seven heads in
Da 7:4-7,
one head on the first beast (Babylon), one on the second
(Medo-Persia), four on the third (Greece; namely, Egypt, Syria,
Thrace with Bithynia, and Greece with Macedon): but Egypt and Greece
are in both lists. Syria answers to Assyria (from which the name Syria
is abbreviated), and Thrace with Bithynia answers to the
Gothic-Germanic-Slavonic hordes which, pouring down on Rome from the
North, founded the Germanic-Slavonic empire. The woman sitting on
the seven hills implies the Old and New Testament Church conforming
to, and resting on, the world power, that is, on all the seven world
kingdoms. Abraham and Isaac dissembling as to their wives through fear
of the kings of Egypt foreshadowed this. Compare
Eze 16:1-63; 23:1-49,
on Israel's whoredoms with Egypt, Assyria, Babylon; and
Mt 7:24; 24:10-12, 23-26,
on the characteristics of the New Testament Church's harlotry, namely,
distrust, suspicion, hatred, treachery, divisions into parties, false
doctrine.
JFB.
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