8. granted--Though in one sense she "made herself ready,"
having by the Spirit's work in her put on "the wedding garment," yet in
the fullest sense it is not she, but her Lord, who makes her ready by
"granting to her that she be arrayed in fine linen." It is He
who, by giving Himself for her, presents her to Himself a
glorious Church, not having spot, but holy and without blemish. It
is He also who sanctifies her, naturally vile and without beauty,
with the washing of water by the word, and puts His own comeliness
on her, which thus becomes hers.
clean and white--so ANDREAS. But A and B
transpose. Translate, "bright and pure"; at once brilliantly
splendid and spotless as in the bride herself.
righteousness--Greek, "righteousnesses"; distributively
used. Each saint must have this righteousness: not merely be
justified, as if the righteousness belonged to the Church in the
aggregate; the saints together have righteousnesses; namely,
He is accounted as "the Lord our righteousness" to each saint on
his believing, their robes being made white in the blood of the
Lamb. The righteousness of the saint is not, as
ALFORD erroneously states, inherent, but is
imputed: if it were otherwise, Christ would be merely enabling
the sinner to justify himself.
Ro 5:18
is decisive on this. Compare Article XI, Church of England. The
justification already given to the saints in title and unseen
possession, is now GIVEN them in manifestation:
they openly walk with Christ in white. To this, rather than
to their primary justification on earth, the reference is here. Their
justification before the apostate world, which had persecuted them,
contrasts with the judgment and condemnation of the harlot. "Now that
the harlot has fallen, the woman triumphs" [AUBERLEN]. Contrast with the pure fine linen
(indicating the simplicity and purity) of the bride, the tawdry
ornamentation of the harlot. Babylon, the apostate Church, is the
antithesis to new Jerusalem, the transfigured Church of God. The woman
(Re 12:1-6),
the harlot
(Re 17:1-7),
the bride
(Re 19:1-10),
are the three leading aspects of the Church.
JFB.
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