20. a few things--omitted in the three oldest manuscripts.
Translate then, "I have against thee that," &c.
sufferest--The three oldest manuscripts read, "lettest alone."
that woman--Two oldest manuscripts read,
"THY wife"; two omit it. Vulgate and most
ancient versions read as English Version. The symbolical Jezebel
was to the Church of Thyatira what Jezebel, Ahab's "wife," was to him.
Some self-styled prophetess (or as the feminine in Hebrew is
often used collectively to express a multitude, a set of
false prophets), as closely attached to the Church of Thyatira as a
wife is to a husband, and as powerfully influencing for evil
that Church as Jezebel did Ahab. As Balaam, in Israel's early history,
so Jezebel, daughter of Eth-baal, king of Sidon
(1Ki 16:31,
formerly priest of Astarte, and murderer of his predecessor on the
throne, JOSEPHUS
[Against Apion, 1.18]), was the great seducer to
idolatry in Israel's later history. Like her father, she was swift to
shed blood. Wholly given to Baal worship, like Eth-baal, whose name
expresses his idolatry, she, with her strong will, seduced the weak
Ahab and Israel beyond the calf-worship (which was a worship of the
true God under the cherub-ox form, that is, a violation of the second
commandment) to that of Baal
(a violation of the first commandment also).
She seems to have been herself a priestess and prophetess of
Baal. Compare
2Ki 9:22, 30,
"whoredoms of . . . Jezebel and her
witchcrafts" (impurity was part of the worship of the
Phœnician Astarte, or Venus). Her spiritual counterpart at
Thyatira lured God's "servants" by pretended utterances of inspiration
to the same libertinism, fornication, and eating of idol-meats, as the
Balaamites and Nicolaitanes
(Re 2:6, 14, 15).
By a false spiritualism these seducers led their victims into the
grossest carnality, as though things done in the flesh were outside the
true man, and were, therefore, indifferent. "The deeper the Church
penetrated into heathenism, the more she herself became heathenish;
this prepares us for the expressions 'harlot' and 'Babylon,' applied to
her afterwards" [AUBERLEN].
to teach and to seduce--The three oldest manuscripts read, "and
she teaches and seduces," or "deceives." "Thyatira was just the reverse
of Ephesus. There, much zeal for orthodoxy, but little love; here,
activity of faith and love, but insufficient zeal for godly discipline
and doctrine, a patience of error even where there was not a
participation in it" [TRENCH].
JFB.
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