6. But--How graciously, after necessary censure, He returns to
praise for our consolation, and as an example to us, that we
would show, when we reprove, we have more pleasure in praising than in
fault-finding.
hatest the deeds--We should hate men's evil deeds, not
hate the men themselves.
Nicolaitanes--IRENÆUS [Against
Heresies, 1.26.3] and TERTULLIAN
[Prescription against Heretics, 46] make these followers of
Nicolas, one of the seven (honorably mentioned,
Ac 6:3, 5).
They (CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA
[Miscellanies, 2.20 3.4] and EPIPHANIUS
[Heresies, 25]) evidently confound the latter Gnostic
Nicolaitanes, or followers of one Nicolaos, with those of Revelation.
MICHAELIS' view is probable: Nicolaos
(conqueror of the people) is the Greek version of Balaam,
from Hebrew "Belang Am," "Destroyer of the people."
Revelation abounds in such duplicate Hebrew and Greek
names: as Apollyon, Abaddon: Devil, Satan: Yea (Greek,
"Nai"), Amen. The name, like other names, Egypt, Babylon, Sodom,
is symbolic. Compare
Re 2:14, 15,
which shows the true sense of Nicolaitanes; they are not a sect, but
professing Christians who, like Balaam of old. tried to introduce into
the Church a false freedom, that is, licentiousness; this was a
reaction in the opposite direction from Judaism, the first danger to
the Church combated in the council of Jerusalem, and by Paul in the
Epistle to Galatians. These symbolical Nicolaitanes, or followers of
Balaam, abused Paul's doctrine of the grace of God into a plea for
lasciviousness
(2Pe 2:15, 16, 19;
Jude 4, 11
who both describe the same sort of seducers as followers of
Balaam). The difficulty that they should appropriate a name
branded with infamy in Scripture is met by TRENCH:
The Antinomian Gnostics were so opposed to John as a Judaizing apostle
that they would assume as a name of chiefest honor one which John
branded with dishonor.
JFB.
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