8. death--on herself, though she thought herself secure even
from the death of her husband.
mourning--instead of her feasting.
famine--instead of her luxurious delicacies
(Re 18:3, 7).
fire--(See on
Re 17:16).
Literal fire may burn the literal city of Rome, which is situated in
the midst of volcanic agencies. As the ground was cursed for Adam's
sin, and the earth under Noah was sunk beneath the flood, and Sodom was
burnt with fire, so may Rome be. But as the harlot is mystical (the
whole faithless Church), the burning may be mainly mystical,
symbolizing utter destruction and removal. BENGEL
is probably right in thinking Rome will once more rise to power. The
carnal, faithless, and worldly elements in all churches, Roman, Greek,
and Protestant, tend towards one common center, and prepare the way for
the last form of the beast, namely, Antichrist. The Pharisees were in
the main sound in creed, yet judgment fell on them as on the unsound
Sadducees and half-heathenish Samaritans. So faithless and adulterous,
carnal, worldly Protestant churches, will not escape for their
soundness of creed.
the Lord--so B, C, Syriac, and
ANDREAS. But A and Vulgate omit. "Strong"
is the meaning of God's Hebrew name, "EL."
judgeth--But A, B, and C read the past tense
(Greek, "krinas"), "who hath judged her": the
prophetical past for the future: the charge in
Re 18:4
to God's people to come out of her implies that the judgment was
not yet actually executed.
JFB.
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