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Text -- Revelation 14:17 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
14:17 Then another angel came out of the temple in heaven, and he too had a sharp sickle.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Vision | Temple | TRINITY, 2 | Sickle | REVELATION OF JOHN | RETRIBUTION | Meteorology and Celestial Phenomena | Jesus, The Christ | INNOCENTS, MASSACRE OF THE | Angel | ALTAR | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , JFB , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Rev 14:17 - -- He also ( kai autos ). As well as the Reaper on the cloud. This is the fifth angel who is God’ s messenger from heaven (temple where God dwells)...

He also ( kai autos ).

As well as the Reaper on the cloud. This is the fifth angel who is God’ s messenger from heaven (temple where God dwells). This fifth angel with his sharp sickle is to gather the vintage (Rev 14:18-20) as Christ did the wheat.

Vincent: Rev 14:17 - -- Temple ( ναοῦ ) Properly, sanctuary . See on Mat 4:5.

Temple ( ναοῦ )

Properly, sanctuary . See on Mat 4:5.

JFB: Rev 14:17 - -- (Rev 11:19).

TSK: Rev 14:17 - -- came : Rev 14:14, Rev 14:15, Rev 14:18, Rev 15:5, Rev 15:6, Rev 16:1

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Rev 14:17 - -- And another angel - The fifth in order. This angel came for a different purpose - with reference to the cutting off of the enemies of God, repr...

And another angel - The fifth in order. This angel came for a different purpose - with reference to the cutting off of the enemies of God, represented by the gathering of a vintage. Compare Mat 13:41; Mat 24:31.

Came out of the temple which is in heaven - Sent or commissioned by God. See the notes on Rev 14:15.

He also having a sharp sickle - On the word "sickle,"see the notes on Rev 14:14.

Poole: Rev 14:17 - -- This angel some will have to be some instrument God would make use of to cut down antichrist: others would have it to be the word of God in the mout...

This angel some will have to be some instrument God would make use of to cut down antichrist: others would have it to be the word of God in the mouth of his ministers, which, Heb 4:12 , is sharper than a two-edged sword, piercing to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit; and thus they judge this angel to be the same with the rider upon the white horse, Rev 19:11-21 , out of whose mouth went a sharp sword, Rev 14:15 .

PBC: Rev 14:17 - -- The fire of incense was no longer a sweet smelling savour unto the Lord. The harvest was ready but God’s people had offered no sweet incense unto th...

The fire of incense was no longer a sweet smelling savour unto the Lord. The harvest was ready but God’s people had offered no sweet incense unto the Lord. Now the angel of the altar would thrust in his sickle into the earth and gather the vine to be cast into the great winepress of the wrath of God.— Eld. Charles Taylor

Haydock: Rev 14:14-20 - -- Like to the Son of man. That is, to our Saviour Christ, sitting on a white cloud, with a crown of gold, and in his hand a sharp sickle. And another...

Like to the Son of man. That is, to our Saviour Christ, sitting on a white cloud, with a crown of gold, and in his hand a sharp sickle. And another Angel, desiring of him to do justice, by putting in his sickle, because the harvest of the earth was ripe, dry, and withered; i.e. the wicked, ripe for punishment. The like is again represented by the sickle, which is said to be put to the clusters of the vineyard: and they were cast into the great wine-press, or lake of the wrath of God, into hell, where the blood is said to come out even up to the horses' bridles, for a thousand and six hundred furlongs: a metaphorical way of expressing the exceeding great torments of the wicked in hell. But to pretend from hence to give the just dimensions of hell, is a groundless conjecture; of which see Cornelius a Lapide. (Witham)

Gill: Rev 14:17 - -- And another angel came out of the temple which is in heaven,.... It is a strange conceit of Mr. Brightman's, that this angel is Thomas Lord Cromwell, ...

And another angel came out of the temple which is in heaven,.... It is a strange conceit of Mr. Brightman's, that this angel is Thomas Lord Cromwell, in the days of King Henry the Eighth, a sincere favourer of pure religion; and that the following angel is Thomas Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury, a martyr, that had power over fire; and that the vintage, here spoken of, refers to the destroying of religious houses, and disposing of abbey lands to other uses; which was done under the king's authority, by the former of these, at the instigation of the latter, when those who were set over that business made such havoc of the goods of the Papists, that their houses seemed to swim in their spoils, as in a river of pressed grapes. Dr. Goodwin much better interprets it of God's vengeance upon the carnal Protestants and professors of religion; since it is an angel out of the temple that will execute it, and another from the altar, zealous of God's worship, that will provoke to it; and since the winepress will be trodden without the city, the church; and which began in the wars in Germany, in the last age, and will have its full accomplishment when the whole outward court is given to the Gentiles; but how these, who are but a few, when compared with the wicked of the world, should be called the vine of the earth, I see not. Mr. Daubuz thinks this vision of the vintage has had, at least in part, its fulfilment in the late wars in the times of Queen Anne, the Popish countries being then made the seat of war, in which they suffered much; rather they come nearest to the truth of the matter, who take this to be the battle of the great God Almighty, under the sixth vial, Rev 16:14 fought by the word of God, the King of kings, and Lord of lords, who will tread the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God, Rev 19:15 when the beast and false prophet will both be destroyed: but inasmuch as Babylon is before declared to be fallen, Rev 14:8 and since the gathering in of the Lord's wheat at the first resurrection is designed by the harvest, it is best to understand this vintage of the perdition of ungodly men by fire, at the conflagration of the world, which will be at the beginning of the thousand years' reign, and of the gathering of them in at the second resurrection, at the end of it, for the destruction of them in hell, soul and body. And by this "angel" is meant, not the saints of the most High; for though they may be said to come out of the temple, the church, and shall judge the world, yet they will not be employed in gathering together the wicked, and casting them into the lake of fire, or winepress of God's wrath: rather the ministering spirits are intended, who are the reapers at the end of the world, and who will gather the wicked, and bind them like tares in bundles, and cast them into the furnace of fire; though it is best to interpret this of Christ himself, who is often called an Angel in Scripture, as the Angel of God's presence; and the Angel of the covenant; and frequently in this book, as in Rev 7:2 because, as Mediator, he is God's messenger; and he may be said to do that, which he does by others, as instruments, as to gather the vine of the earth, and cast it into the winepress; and he may be said to "come out of the temple which is in heaven": whether this be understood of heaven itself, which the temple, and especially the most holy place in it, was a figure of; here Christ is, and from hence he is expected to come, and will come at the last day, as Judge of all the earth; or of the church of God, for here Christ dwells, and grants his gracious and spiritual presence until his second and personal coming, with all his saints: and now he will have them all with him, both quick and dead, and will be personally in his temple, the church, in the great congregation of the righteous, and out from among them will he display his power in the destruction of the wicked; and the rather he may be thought to be intended, since none but a divine person ever trod the winepress of God's wrath; see Isa 63:1 to which may be added what follows,

he also having a sharp sickle; the same who is described as like to the son of man, on a white cloud, with a golden crown on his head, and such a sickle in his hand, Rev 14:14 which is expressive of the same judiciary power and authority.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Rev 14:17 Here καί (kai) has been translated as “then” to indicate the implied sequence within the narrative.

Geneva Bible: Rev 14:17 ( 14 ) And another angel came out of the temple which is in heaven, he also having a sharp sickle. ( 14 ) The other type (as I said in) See Rev 14:1...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Rev 14:1-20 - --1 The Lamb standing on mount Sion with his company.6 An angel preaches the gospel.8 The fall of Babylon.15 The harvest of the world.20 The winepress o...

MHCC: Rev 14:14-20 - --Warnings and judgments not having produced reformation, the sins of the nations are filled up, and they become ripe for judgments, represented by a ha...

Matthew Henry: Rev 14:13-20 - -- Here we have the vision of the harvest and vintage, introduced with a solemn preface. Observe, I. The preface, Rev 14:13. Here note, 1. Whence this ...

Barclay: Rev 14:14-20 - --The final vision of this chapter is of judgment depicted in pictures which were very familiar to Jewish thought. It begins with the picture of the vic...

Constable: Rev 4:1--22:6 - --III. THE REVELATION OF THE FUTURE 4:1--22:5 John recorded the rest of this book to reveal those aspects of the f...

Constable: Rev 14:1-20 - --1. Judgment at the end of the Great Tribulation ch. 14 John recorded these scenes of his vision ...

Constable: Rev 14:14-20 - --The reaping and treading of God's harvest 14:14-20 This is the final scene that furnishes background information before the revelation of the seven bo...

College: Rev 14:1-20 - --REVELATION 14 3. The Final Judgment and Consummation of God's Kingdom (14:1-22:6) a. The Relationship between Salvation and Condemnation, Final Judg...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Revelation (Book Introduction) THE REVELATION OF JOHN ABOUT a.d. 95 By Way of Introduction Difficulty in the Problem Perhaps no single book in the New Testament presents so ...

JFB: Revelation (Book Introduction) AUTHENTICITY.--The author calls himself John (Rev 1:1, Rev 1:4, Rev 1:9; Rev 2:8). JUSTIN MARTYR [Dialogue with Trypho, p. 308] (A.D. 139-161) quotes ...

JFB: Revelation (Outline) TITLE: SOURCE AND OBJECT OF THIS REVELATION: BLESSING ON THE READER AND KEEPER OF IT, AS THE TIME IS NEAR: INSCRIPTION TO THE SEVEN CHURCHES: APOSTOL...

TSK: Revelation (Book Introduction) The obscurity of this prophecy, which has been urged against its genuineness, necessarily results from the highly figurative and symbolical language i...

TSK: Revelation 14 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Rev 14:1, The Lamb standing on mount Sion with his company; Rev 14:6, An angel preaches the gospel; Rev 14:8, The fall of Babylon; Rev 14...

Poole: Revelation 14 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 14

MHCC: Revelation (Book Introduction) The Book of the Revelation of St. John consists of two principal divisions. 1. Relates to " the things which are," that is, the then present state of...

MHCC: Revelation 14 (Chapter Introduction) (Rev 14:1-5) Those faithful to Christ celebrate the praises of God. (Rev 14:6-13) Three angels; one proclaiming the everlasting gospel; another, the ...

Matthew Henry: Revelation (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Revelation of St. John the Divine It ought to be no prejudice to the credit and authority of this b...

Matthew Henry: Revelation 14 (Chapter Introduction) After an account of the great trials and sufferings which the servants of God had endured, we have now a more pleasant scene opening; the day begin...

Barclay: Revelation (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE REVELATION OF JOHN The Strange Book When a student of the New Testament embarks upon the study of the Revelation he feels him...

Barclay: Revelation 14 (Chapter Introduction) The Father's Own (Rev_14:1) The Song Which Only God's Own Can Learn (Rev_14:2-3) The Finest Flower (Rev_14:4) The Imitation Of Christ (Rev_14:4-5...

Constable: Revelation (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background The opening verses of the book state that "John" wr...

Constable: Revelation (Outline) Outline I. The preparation of the prophet ch. 1 A. The prologue of the book 1:1-8 ...

Constable: Revelation Revelation Bibliography Abbott-Smith, George. A Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament. Edinburgh: T. & ...

Haydock: Revelation (Book Introduction) THE APOCALYPSE OF ST. JOHN, THE APOSTLE. INTRODUCTION. Though some in the first ages [centuries] doubted whether this book was canonical, and ...

Gill: Revelation (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO REVELATION That this book was written by the Apostle and Evangelist John, is clear not only from the express mention of his name, a...

Gill: Revelation 14 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO REVELATION 14 This chapter contains three visions; one of the Lamb on Mount Zion, another of the three angels preaching against Bab...

College: Revelation (Book Introduction) PREFACE This commentary on the Revelation of John has been prepared for general readers of the Bible who desire to deepen their understanding of God'...

College: Revelation (Outline) OUTLINE I. PROLOGUE - 1:1-20 A. Introduction to the Prophecy - 1:1-3 B. Sender - 1:4a C. Recipients - 1:4b D. Prescript - 1:4c-5a E. ...

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