
Text -- Revelation 14:9-20 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson -> Rev 14:9; Rev 14:9; Rev 14:9; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:16; Rev 14:16; Rev 14:17; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20
Robertson: Rev 14:9 - -- A third ( tritos ).
"The third of this succession of herald angels denounces the Caesar-worshippers"(Swete). Cf. Rev 13:12. This counter proclamation...
A third (
"The third of this succession of herald angels denounces the Caesar-worshippers"(Swete). Cf. Rev 13:12. This counter proclamation (Rev 14:9-12) warns those tempted to yield to the threats of the second beast about boycott and death (Rev 13:11-17).

Robertson: Rev 14:9 - -- If any man worshippeth the beast and his image ( ei tis proskunei to thērion kai tēn eikona autou ).
Condition of first class challenging those a...
If any man worshippeth the beast and his image (
Condition of first class challenging those afraid of the beast. Note accusative (

Robertson: Rev 14:9 - -- And receiveth a mark ( kai lambanei charagma ).
Carries on the same condition and picks up the very language of Rev 13:16. These Caesar-worshippers a...

Robertson: Rev 14:10 - -- He also shall drink ( kai autos pietai ).
Future middle of pinō . Certainty for him as for Babylon and her paramours (Rev 16:17).
He also shall drink (
Future middle of

Robertson: Rev 14:10 - -- Of the wine of the wrath of God ( ek tou oinou tou thumou tou theou ).
Note ek (partitive) after pietai . In Rev 16:19; Rev 19:15 we have both thum...

Robertson: Rev 14:10 - -- Prepared unmixed ( tou kekerasmenou akratou ).
A bold and powerful oxymoron, "the mixed unmixed."Akratos is an old adjective (alpha privative and k...
Prepared unmixed (
A bold and powerful oxymoron, "the mixed unmixed."

Robertson: Rev 14:10 - -- In the cup of his anger ( en tōi potēriōi tēs orgēs autou ).
Both thumos (vehement fury) and orgē (settled indignation).
In the cup of his anger (
Both

Robertson: Rev 14:10 - -- He shall be tormented ( basanisthēsetai ).
Future passive of basanizō . See Rev 9:5; Rev 11:10.

Robertson: Rev 14:10 - -- With fire and brimstone ( en puri kai theiōi ).
See Rev 9:17 for fire and brimstone and also Rev 19:20; Rev 20:10; Rev 21:8. The imagery is already...

Robertson: Rev 14:10 - -- In the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb ( enōpion aggelōn hagiōn kai enōpion tou arniou ).
This holy environment a...
In the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb (
This holy environment adds to the punishment.

Robertson: Rev 14:11 - -- The smoke of their torment ( ho kapnos tou basanismou autōn ).
See Rev 9:5 for basanismos , only there it was a limited penalty, here it is "for ev...

Robertson: Rev 14:11 - -- They have no rest ( ouk echousin anapausin ).
The very language used in Rev 4:8 of the four living creatures in praising God. "Those who desert Chris...

Robertson: Rev 14:12 - -- Here is the patience of the saints ( Hōde hē hupomonē tōn hagiōn estin ).
John’ s own comment as in Rev 13:10; Rev 17:9. In this strug...

Robertson: Rev 14:12 - -- They that keep ( hoi tērountes ).
In apposition with tōn hagiōn (genitive), though nominative, a frequent anacoluthon in this book (Rev 2:20,...

Robertson: Rev 14:12 - -- The faith of Jesus ( tēn pistin Iēsou ).
"The faith in Jesus"(objective genitive) as in Rev 2:13; Mar 11:22; Jam 2:1.

Robertson: Rev 14:13 - -- Write ( Grapson ).
First aorist active imperative of graphō as in Rev 1:11. John’ s meditation is broken by this command. This new beatitude...
Write (
First aorist active imperative of

Robertson: Rev 14:13 - -- That they may rest ( hina anapaēsontai ).
Purpose clause with hina and the second future passive of anapauō .
That they may rest (
Purpose clause with

Robertson: Rev 14:13 - -- From their labours ( ek tōn kopōn autōn ).
From the toils, the wearinesses, but not from the activities (erga ), for these "follow with them."...
From their labours (
From the toils, the wearinesses, but not from the activities (

Robertson: Rev 14:14 - -- A white cloud ( nephelē leukē ).
Like the "bright cloud"of Mat 17:5 (Transfiguration), a familiar object in the Mediterranean lands. See Dan 7:13...

Robertson: Rev 14:14 - -- I saw one sitting ( kathēmenon ).
No eidon here, but the accusative follows the eidon at the beginning, as nephelē is nominative after idou...

Robertson: Rev 14:14 - -- Like unto a son of man ( homoion huion anthrōpou ).
Accusative here after homoion as in Rev 1:13, instead of the usual associative instrumental (...

Robertson: Rev 14:14 - -- Having ( echōn ).
Nominative again after the idou construction, just before, not after, eidon .
Having (
Nominative again after the

Robertson: Rev 14:14 - -- A golden crown ( stephanon chrusoun ).
Here a golden wreath, not the diadems of Rev 19:12.
A golden crown (
Here a golden wreath, not the diadems of Rev 19:12.

Robertson: Rev 14:14 - -- A sharp sickle ( drepanon oxu ).
Old form drepanē (from drepō , to pluck), pruning-hook, in N.T. only in this chapter and Mar 4:29. Christ is c...
A sharp sickle (
Old form

Robertson: Rev 14:15 - -- Send forth ( pempson ).
First aorist (urgency) active imperative of pempō . "Thrust in thy sickle now,"this angel urges Christ.
Send forth (
First aorist (urgency) active imperative of

Robertson: Rev 14:15 - -- And reap ( kai therison ).
First aorist (urgency) active imperative of therizō , old verb (from theros , summer), as in Mat 6:26. See Rev 14:7 for ...

Robertson: Rev 14:15 - -- The harvest ( ho therismos ).
Old, but rare word (from therizō , to harvest), as in Mat 13:30; Joh 4:35, here only in Revelation.

Robertson: Rev 14:15 - -- Is over-ripe ( exēranthē ).
First aorist (prophetic as in Rev 10:7; Rev 15:1) passive of xērainō (cf. Jam 1:11), to wither, to dry up. Perh...

Robertson: Rev 14:16 - -- Cast ( ebalen ).
Second aorist active indicative of ballō . No violence by the use of ebalen as is seen in Mat 10:34 (balein eirēnēn , to bri...
Cast (
Second aorist active indicative of

Robertson: Rev 14:16 - -- Was reaped ( etheristhē ).
First aorist passive indicative of therizō . Both prophetic aorists again. Christ puts in the sickle as he wills with ...

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 (
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.

Robertson: Rev 14:18 - -- Another angel ( allos aggelos ).
The fifth angel above Swete terms "the Angel of vengeance."He responds to the call of the sixth angel here as Christ...
Another angel (
The fifth angel above Swete terms "the Angel of vengeance."He responds to the call of the sixth angel here as Christ does to the call of the fourth angel in Rev 14:15.

Robertson: Rev 14:18 - -- Out from the altar ( ek tou thusiastēriou ).
From the altar of incense where he is in charge of the fire (exousian epi tou puros ). If it is the a...
Out from the altar (
From the altar of incense where he is in charge of the fire (

Robertson: Rev 14:18 - -- The sharp sickle ( to drepanon to oxu ).
Useful for vintage as for harvesting. So "send forth"(pempson ) as in Rev 14:15.
The sharp sickle (
Useful for vintage as for harvesting. So "send forth"(

Robertson: Rev 14:18 - -- Gather ( trugēson ).
First aorist active imperative of trugaō , old verb (from trugē dryness, ripeness), in N.T. only Rev 14:18. and Luk 6:44...

Robertson: Rev 14:18 - -- The clusters ( tous botruas ).
Old word botrus , here only in N.T. (Gen 40:10).
The clusters (
Old word

Robertson: Rev 14:18 - -- Her grapes ( hai staphulai autēs ).
Old word again for grapes, bunch of grapes, in N.T. only here, Mat 7:16; Luk 6:44.

Robertson: Rev 14:18 - -- Are fully ripe ( ēkmasan ).
Old and common verb (from akmē , Mat 15:16), to come to maturity, to reach its acme, here only in N.T.
Are fully ripe (
Old and common verb (from

Robertson: Rev 14:19 - -- Gathered ( etrugēsen ).
Like etheristhē in Rev 14:16, in obedience to the instructions in Rev 14:18 (trugēson ).

Robertson: Rev 14:19 - -- The vintage of the earth ( tēn ampelon tēs gēs ).
"The vine of the earth."Here ampelos is used for the enemies of Christ collectively picture...
The vintage of the earth (
"The vine of the earth."Here

Robertson: Rev 14:19 - -- And cast it ( ebalen ).
Repeating ebalen and referring to ampelon (vintage) just before.
And cast it (
Repeating

Robertson: Rev 14:19 - -- Into the winepress the great winepress ( eis tēn lēnon ton megan ).
Lēnos is either feminine as in Rev 14:20; Rev 19:15, or masculine sometim...
Into the winepress the great winepress (

Robertson: Rev 14:20 - -- Was trodden ( epatēthē ).
First aorist passive indicative of pateō , to tread. The image of treading out the grapes is a familiar one in the Ea...
Was trodden (
First aorist passive indicative of

Robertson: Rev 14:20 - -- Without the city ( exōthen tēs poleōs ).
Ablative case with exōthen (like exō ). This was the usual place (Heb 13:12). See exōthen i...

Robertson: Rev 14:20 - -- Blood from the winepress ( haima ek tēs lēnou ).
Bold imagery suggested by the colour of the grapes.
Blood from the winepress (
Bold imagery suggested by the colour of the grapes.

Robertson: Rev 14:20 - -- Unto the bridles ( achri tōn chalinōn ).
Old word (from chalaō to slacken), in N.T. only here and Jam 3:3. Bold picture.
Unto the bridles (
Old word (from

Robertson: Rev 14:20 - -- As far as a thousand and six hundred furlongs ( apo stadiōn chiliōn hexakosiōn ).
A peculiar use of apo , for "distance from (of)"as also in Jo...
As far as a thousand and six hundred furlongs (
A peculiar use of
Vincent -> Rev 14:9; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:16; Rev 14:17; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:20
Vincent: Rev 14:9 - -- The third angel ( τρίτος ἄγγελος )
Add ἄλλος another . Rev., another angel , a third .
The third angel (
Add

Vincent: Rev 14:10 - -- Poured out without mixture ( κεκερασμένου ἀκράτου )
Lit., which is mingled unmixed . From the universal custom of...
Poured out without mixture (
Lit., which is mingled unmixed . From the universal custom of mixing wine with water for drinking, the word mingle came to be used in the general sense of prepare by putting into the cup . Hence, to pour out .

Vincent: Rev 14:10 - -- Brimstone ( θείῳ )
Commonly taken as the neuter of θεῖος divine; that is, divine incense , since burning brimstone was regarde...
Brimstone (
Commonly taken as the neuter of



Vincent: Rev 14:11 - -- Rest ( ἀνάπαυσιν )
See on give rest , Mat 11:28, and see on resteth , 1Pe 4:14.

Vincent: Rev 14:12 - -- Here are they
Omit here are , and read, are , Rev., the patience of the saints , they that keep .
Here are they
Omit here are , and read, are , Rev., the patience of the saints , they that keep .

The faith of Jesus
Which has Jesus for its object.

Vincent: Rev 14:13 - -- From henceforth ( ἀπ ' ἄρτι )
See on Joh 13:33. To be joined as in A.V. and Rev., with die in the preceding clause, and not with bl...
From henceforth (
See on Joh 13:33. To be joined as in A.V. and Rev., with die in the preceding clause, and not with blessed, nor with the following clause. Not from henceforth saith the Spirit . The meaning is variously explained. Some, from the beginning of the Christian age and onward to the end; others, from the moment of death, connecting henceforth with blessed ; others from the time when the harvest of the earth is about to be reaped. Sophocles says: " Show all religious reverence to the gods, for all other things Father Zeus counts secondary; for the reward of piety follows men in death. Whether they live or die it passeth not away" (" Philoctetes," 1441-1444).

Vincent: Rev 14:13 - -- That they may rest ( ἵνα ἀναπαύσωνται )
See on Mat 11:28. The ἵνα that gives the ground of the blessed...
That they may rest (
See on Mat 11:28. The

Vincent: Rev 14:13 - -- Labors ( κόπων )
From κόπων to strike . Hence to beat the breast in grief. Κόπος is, therefore, primarily, a smit...
Labors (
From

Vincent: Rev 14:13 - -- Follow them ( ἀκολουθεῖ μετ ' αὐτῶν )
Rather, accompany. Rev., follow with them. Compare Mat 4:25; Mar 3:7, etc. See on ...

Thrust in (
Lit., send . Rev., send forth .

Vincent: Rev 14:15 - -- Is ripe ( ἐξηράνθη )
Lit., was dried . Compare Mar 11:20; Joh 15:6. Rev., is over-ripe .

Vincent: Rev 14:18 - -- Which has power ( ἔξων ἐξουσίαν )
Lit., having power . Some texts add the article ὁ . So Rev., " he that hath power."...
Which has power (
Lit., having power . Some texts add the article

Fire
In the Greek with the article, the fire.

Thy sharp sickle
Lit., thy sickle , the sharp .

Vincent: Rev 14:18 - -- Gather ( τρύγησον )
From τρύγη dryness , included in the notion of ripeness, and hence the vintage , harvest . The verb mea...
Gather (
From

Vincent: Rev 14:18 - -- Grapes ( σταφυλαὶ )
The noun in the singular means also a bunch of grapes .
Grapes (
The noun in the singular means also a bunch of grapes .

Vincent: Rev 14:18 - -- Are fully ripe ( ἤκμασαν )
Only here in the New Testament. From ἀκμή , transcribed in acme , the highest point . Hence t...
Are fully ripe (
Only here in the New Testament. From

Vincent: Rev 14:19 - -- The great wine-press ( τὴν ληὸν τὸν μέγαν )
The Greek student will note the masculine adjective with the feminine noun, po...
The great wine-press (
The Greek student will note the masculine adjective with the feminine noun, possibly because the gender of the noun is doubtful. The Rev., in rendering more literally, is more forcible: the wine-press , the great wine-press . See on Mat 21:33.

Furlong (
The furlong or stadium was 606 3/4 English feet.
Wesley -> Rev 14:9; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:16; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20
Wesley: Rev 14:9 - -- At no great distance of time. Saying, If any one worship the wild beast - This worship consists, partly in an inward submission, a persuasion that all...
At no great distance of time. Saying, If any one worship the wild beast - This worship consists, partly in an inward submission, a persuasion that all who are subject to Christ must be subject to the beast or they cannot receive the influences of divine grace, or, as their expression is, there is no salvation out of their church; partly in a suitable outward reverence to the beast himself, and consequently to his image.

Wesley: Rev 14:10 - -- With the beast, Rev 20:10. In all the scripture there is not another so terrible threatening as this. And God by this greater fear arms his servants a...
With the beast, Rev 20:10. In all the scripture there is not another so terrible threatening as this. And God by this greater fear arms his servants against the fear of the beast. The wrath of God, which is poured unmixed - Without any mixture of mercy; without hope.

Wesley: Rev 14:10 - -- And is no real anger implied in all this? O what will not even wise men assert, to serve an hypothesis!
And is no real anger implied in all this? O what will not even wise men assert, to serve an hypothesis!

From the fire and brimstone wherein they are tormented.

Wesley: Rev 14:11 - -- God grant thou and I may never try the strict, literal eternity of this torment!
God grant thou and I may never try the strict, literal eternity of this torment!

Seen, in suffering all things rather than receive this mark.

Wesley: Rev 14:12 - -- The character of all true saints; and particularly the great command to believe in Jesus.
The character of all true saints; and particularly the great command to believe in Jesus.

Wesley: Rev 14:13 - -- This is most seasonably heard when the beast is in his highest power and fury.
This is most seasonably heard when the beast is in his highest power and fury.

Wesley: Rev 14:13 - -- He was at first commanded to write the whole book. Whenever this is repeated it denotes something peculiarly observable.
He was at first commanded to write the whole book. Whenever this is repeated it denotes something peculiarly observable.

Wesley: Rev 14:13 - -- From henceforth particularly: 1. Because they escape the approaching calamities: 2. Because they already enjoy so near an approach to glory.
From henceforth particularly: 1. Because they escape the approaching calamities: 2. Because they already enjoy so near an approach to glory.

No pain, no purgatory follows; but pure, unmixed happiness.

Wesley: Rev 14:13 - -- And the more laborious their life was, the sweeter is their rest. How different this state from that of those, Rev 14:11, who "have no rest day or nig...
And the more laborious their life was, the sweeter is their rest. How different this state from that of those, Rev 14:11, who "have no rest day or night!" Reader, which wilt thou choose? Their works - Each one's peculiar works.

Wesley: Rev 14:13 - -- or accompany them; that is, the fruit of their works. Their works do not go before to procure them admittance into the mansions of joy; but they follo...
or accompany them; that is, the fruit of their works. Their works do not go before to procure them admittance into the mansions of joy; but they follow them when admitted.

Wesley: Rev 14:14 - -- In the following verses, under the emblem of an harvest and a vintage, are signified two general visitations; first, many good men are taken from the ...
In the following verses, under the emblem of an harvest and a vintage, are signified two general visitations; first, many good men are taken from the earth by the harvest; then many sinners during the vintage. The latter is altogether a penal visitation; the former seems to be altogether gracious. Here is no reference in either to the day of judgment, but to a season which cannot be far off.

Wesley: Rev 14:14 - -- An angel in an human shape, sent by Christ, the Lord both of the vintage and of the harvest.
An angel in an human shape, sent by Christ, the Lord both of the vintage and of the harvest.

The sharper the welcomer to the righteous.

Wesley: Rev 14:15 - -- "Which is in heaven," Rev 14:17. Out of which came the judgments of God in the appointed seasons.
"Which is in heaven," Rev 14:17. Out of which came the judgments of God in the appointed seasons.

Wesley: Rev 14:16 - -- By the command of God. Thrust in thy sickle, for the harvest is ripe - This implies an high degree of holiness in those good men, and an earnest desir...
By the command of God. Thrust in thy sickle, for the harvest is ripe - This implies an high degree of holiness in those good men, and an earnest desire to be with God.

Of burnt offering; from whence the martyrs had cried for vengeance.

Wesley: Rev 14:18 - -- As "the angel of the waters," Rev 16:5, had over water. Cried, saying, Lop off the clusters of the vine of the earth - All the wicked are considered a...
As "the angel of the waters," Rev 16:5, had over water. Cried, saying, Lop off the clusters of the vine of the earth - All the wicked are considered as constituting one body.

Wesley: Rev 14:20 - -- Jerusalem. They to whom St. John writes, when a man said, "The city," immediately understood this. And blood came out of the winepress, even to the ho...
Jerusalem. They to whom St. John writes, when a man said, "The city," immediately understood this. And blood came out of the winepress, even to the horses' bridles - So deep at its first flowing from the winepress! One thousand six hundred furlongs - So far! at least two hundred miles, through the whole land of Palestine.
JFB -> Rev 14:9; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:16; Rev 14:17; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20
JFB: Rev 14:9 - -- A, B, C, and ANDREAS read, "another, a third angel." Compare with this verse Rev 13:15-16.
A, B, C, and ANDREAS read, "another, a third angel." Compare with this verse Rev 13:15-16.

Greek, "he also," as the just and inevitable retribution.

JFB: Rev 14:10 - -- Whereas wine was so commonly mixed with water that to mix wine is used in Greek for to pour out wine; this wine of God's wrath is undiluted; there is ...
Whereas wine was so commonly mixed with water that to mix wine is used in Greek for to pour out wine; this wine of God's wrath is undiluted; there is no drop of water to cool its heat. Naught of grace or hope is blended with it. This terrible threat may well raise us above the fear of man's threats. This unmixed cup is already mingled and prepared for Satan and the beast's followers.

JFB: Rev 14:10 - -- Greek, "orges," "abiding wrath," But the Greek for "wrath" above (Greek, "thumou") is boiling indignation, from (Greek, "thuo") a root meaning "to boi...
Greek, "orges," "abiding wrath," But the Greek for "wrath" above (Greek, "thumou") is boiling indignation, from (Greek, "thuo") a root meaning "to boil"; this is temporary ebullition of anger; that is lasting [AMMONIUS], and accompanied with a purpose of vengeance [ORIGEN on Psa 2:5].

JFB: Rev 14:10 - -- (Psa 49:14; Psa 58:10; Psa 139:21; Isa 66:24). God's enemies are regarded by the saints as their enemies, and when the day of probation is past, thei...
(Psa 49:14; Psa 58:10; Psa 139:21; Isa 66:24). God's enemies are regarded by the saints as their enemies, and when the day of probation is past, their mind shall be so entirely one with God's, that they shall rejoice in witnessing visibly the judicial vindication of God's righteousness in sinners' punishment.

JFB: Rev 14:11 - -- Contrast the very different sense in which the same is said of the four living creatures in heaven, "They rest not day and night, saying, Holy, holy, ...
Contrast the very different sense in which the same is said of the four living creatures in heaven, "They rest not day and night, saying, Holy, holy, holy"; yet they do "rest" in another sense; they rest from sin and sorrow, weariness and weakness, trial and temptation (Rev 14:13); the lost have no rest from sin and Satan, terror, torment, and remorse.

JFB: Rev 14:12 - -- Resumed from Rev 13:10; see on Rev 13:10. In the fiery ordeal of persecution which awaits all who will not worship the beast, the faith and patience o...

JFB: Rev 14:12 - -- Greek, "hupomene," "patient, persevering endurance." The second "here" is omitted in A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and PRIMASIUS. Translate, "Here...
Greek, "hupomene," "patient, persevering endurance." The second "here" is omitted in A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and PRIMASIUS. Translate, "Here is the endurance of the saints, who keep," &c.

The faith which has Jesus for its object.

Encouragement to cheer those persecuted under the beast.

JFB: Rev 14:13 - -- In resting from their toils, and, in the case of the saints just before alluded to as persecuted by the beast, in resting from persecutions. Their ful...
In resting from their toils, and, in the case of the saints just before alluded to as persecuted by the beast, in resting from persecutions. Their full blessedness is now "from henceforth," that is, FROM THIS TIME, when the judgment on the beast and the harvest gatherings of the elect are imminent. The time so earnestly longed for by former martyrs is now all but come; the full number of their fellow servants is on the verge of completion; they have no longer to "rest (the same Greek as here, anapausis) yet for a little season," their eternal rest, or cessation from toils (2Th 1:7; Greek, "anesis," relaxation after hardships. Heb 4:9-10, sabbatism of rest; and Greek, "catapausis," akin to the Greek here) is close at hand now. They are blessed in being about to sit down to the marriage supper of the Lamb (Rev 19:9), and in having part in the first resurrection (Rev 20:6), and in having right to the tree of life (Rev 22:14). In Rev 14:14-16 follows the explanation of why they are pronounced "blessed" now in particular, namely, the Son of man on the cloud is just coming to gather them in as the harvest ripe for garner.

JFB: Rev 14:13 - -- The words of God the Father (the "voice from heaven") are echoed back and confirmed by the Spirit (speaking in the Word, Rev 2:7; Rev 22:17; and in th...

Omitted in A, B, C, Vulgate, Syriac, and Coptic.

JFB: Rev 14:13 - -- The Greek includes also the idea, They are blessed, in that they SHALL rest from their toils (so the Greek).
The Greek includes also the idea, They are blessed, in that they SHALL rest from their toils (so the Greek).

JFB: Rev 14:13 - -- So B and ANDREAS read. But A, C, Vulgate, and Syriac read "for." They rest from their toils because their time for toil is past; they enter on the ble...
So B and ANDREAS read. But A, C, Vulgate, and Syriac read "for." They rest from their toils because their time for toil is past; they enter on the blessed rest because of their faith evinced by their works which, therefore, "follow WITH (so the Greek) them." Their works are specified because respect is had to the coming judgment, wherein every man shall be "judged according to his works." His works do not go before the believer, nor even go by his side, but follow him at the same time that they go with him as a proof that he is Christ's.

JFB: Rev 14:14 - -- Greek, "stephanon," "garland" of victory; not His diadem as a king. The victory is described in detail, Rev 19:11-21.
Greek, "stephanon," "garland" of victory; not His diadem as a king. The victory is described in detail, Rev 19:11-21.

JFB: Rev 14:14 - -- "one sitting," Greek, "cathemenon homoion," is the reading of A, B, C, Vulgate, and Coptic.
"one sitting," Greek, "cathemenon homoion," is the reading of A, B, C, Vulgate, and Coptic.

JFB: Rev 14:15 - -- Greek, "Send." The angel does not command the "Son of man" (Rev 14:14), but is the mere messenger announcing to the Son the will of God the Father, in...
Greek, "Send." The angel does not command the "Son of man" (Rev 14:14), but is the mere messenger announcing to the Son the will of God the Father, in whose hands are kept the times and the seasons.

JFB: Rev 14:15 - -- Alluding to Mar 4:29, where also it is "sendeth the sickle." The Son sends His sickle-bearing angel to reap the righteous when fully ripe.
Alluding to Mar 4:29, where also it is "sendeth the sickle." The Son sends His sickle-bearing angel to reap the righteous when fully ripe.

JFB: Rev 14:15 - -- The harvest crop. By the harvest-reaping the elect righteous are gathered out; by the vintage the Antichristian offenders are removed out of the earth...
The harvest crop. By the harvest-reaping the elect righteous are gathered out; by the vintage the Antichristian offenders are removed out of the earth, the scene of Christ's coming kingdom. The Son of man Himself, with a golden crown, is introduced in the harvest-gathering of the elect, a mere angel in the vintage (Rev 14:18-20).

JFB: Rev 14:18 - -- Upon which were offered the incense-accompanied prayers of all saints, which bring down in answer God's fiery judgment on the Church's foes, the fire ...
Upon which were offered the incense-accompanied prayers of all saints, which bring down in answer God's fiery judgment on the Church's foes, the fire being taken from the altar and cast upon the earth.

Greek, "come to their acme"; ripe for punishment.

JFB: Rev 14:19 - -- "The vine" is what is the subject of judgment because its grapes are not what God looked for considering its careful culture, but "wild grapes" (Isa. ...
"The vine" is what is the subject of judgment because its grapes are not what God looked for considering its careful culture, but "wild grapes" (Isa. 5:1-30). The apostate world of Christendom, not the world of heathendom who have not heard of Christ, is the object of judgment. Compare the emblem, Rev 19:15; Isa 63:2-3; Joe 3:13.

JFB: Rev 14:20 - -- Jerusalem. The scene of the blood-shedding of Christ and His people shall be also the scene of God's vengeance on the Antichristian foe. Compare the "...
Jerusalem. The scene of the blood-shedding of Christ and His people shall be also the scene of God's vengeance on the Antichristian foe. Compare the "horsemen," Rev 9:16-17.

JFB: Rev 14:20 - -- Answering to the red wine. The slaughter of the apostates is what is here spoken of, not their eternal punishment.
Answering to the red wine. The slaughter of the apostates is what is here spoken of, not their eternal punishment.

JFB: Rev 14:20 - -- Literally, "a thousand six hundred furlongs off" [W. KELLY]. Sixteen hundred is a square number; four by four by one hundred. The four quarters, north...
Literally, "a thousand six hundred furlongs off" [W. KELLY]. Sixteen hundred is a square number; four by four by one hundred. The four quarters, north, south, east, and west, of the Holy Land, or else of the world (the completeness and universality of the world-wide destruction being hereby indicated). It does not exactly answer to the length of Palestine as given by JEROME, one hundred sixty Roman miles. BENGEL thinks the valley of Kedron, between Jerusalem and the Mount of Olives, is meant, the torrent in that valley being about to be discolored with blood to the extent of sixteen hundred furlongs. This view accords with Joel's prophecy that the valley of Jehoshaphat is to be the scene of the overthrow of the Antichristian foes.
Clarke: Rev 14:9 - -- And the third angel followed - Bishop Bale considers these three angels as three descriptions of preachers, who should bear their testimony against ...
And the third angel followed - Bishop Bale considers these three angels as three descriptions of preachers, who should bear their testimony against the corruptions of the papal Church

The beast and his image - See the notes on Revelation 13:1-18 (note)

Clarke: Rev 14:9 - -- Mark in his forehead - Such as the sectarial marks of the idolatrous Hindoos, as has been observed before.
Mark in his forehead - Such as the sectarial marks of the idolatrous Hindoos, as has been observed before.

Clarke: Rev 14:10 - -- The wine of the wrath of God - As they have drunk the intoxicating wine of idolatry or spiritual fornication, they shall now drink the wine of God...
The wine of the wrath of God - As they have drunk the intoxicating wine of idolatry or spiritual fornication, they shall now drink the wine of God’ s wrath, which is poured out into the cup of his indignation. This is an allusion to the poisoned cup, which certain criminals were obliged to drink, on which ensued speedy death. See on Heb 2:9 (note)

Clarke: Rev 14:10 - -- Shall be tormented with fire and brimstone - An allusion to the punishment of Sodom and Gomorrha for their unnatural crimes
Shall be tormented with fire and brimstone - An allusion to the punishment of Sodom and Gomorrha for their unnatural crimes

Clarke: Rev 14:10 - -- Presence of the holy angels, and - of the Lamb - These being the instruments employed in their destruction; the Lamb - the Lord Jesus Christ, acting...
Presence of the holy angels, and - of the Lamb - These being the instruments employed in their destruction; the Lamb - the Lord Jesus Christ, acting as judge.

Clarke: Rev 14:11 - -- The smoke of their torment - Still an allusion to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrha.
The smoke of their torment - Still an allusion to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrha.

Clarke: Rev 14:12 - -- Here is the patience of the saints - Here the faith of the true Christians shall be proved; they will follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth, they k...
Here is the patience of the saints - Here the faith of the true Christians shall be proved; they will follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth, they keep the commandments of God, and are steadfast in the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ. Sometimes

Clarke: Rev 14:13 - -- I heard a voice from heaven - As the information now to be given was of the utmost importance, it is solemnly communicated by a voice from heaven; a...
I heard a voice from heaven - As the information now to be given was of the utmost importance, it is solemnly communicated by a voice from heaven; and the apostle is commanded to write or record what is said

Clarke: Rev 14:13 - -- Blessed are the dead - Happy are they. They are happy in two respects
1. They do not see the evil that shall come upon the world, ...
Blessed are the dead - Happy are they. They are happy in two respects
1. They do not see the evil that shall come upon the world, and are exempted from any farther sufferings
2. They actually and conscientiously enjoy happiness in a state of blessedness
In the first sense, Happy are the dead! is a proverb frequently to be met in the Greek and Roman poets. Ex. gr
Odyss., lib. v. ver. 306
Happy, thrice happy; who, in battle slain
Press’ d, in Atrides’ cause, the Trojan plain
O, had I died before that well fought wall
Had some distinguished day renown’ d my fall
Such as was that when showers of javelins fled
From conquering Troy, around Achilles dead
Pope
Thus imitated by the prince of the Roman poets: -
Extemplo Aeneae solvuntur frigore membra
Ingemit, et, duplices tendens ad sidera palmas
Talia voce refert: O terque quaterque beati
Queis ante ora patrum Trojae sub moenibus alti
Contigit oppetere! O Danaum fortissime genti
Tydide, mene Iliacis occumbere campi
Non potuisse? tuaque animam hanc effundere dextra
Saevus ubi Aeacidae telo jacet Hector, ubi ingen
Sarpedon: ubi tot Simois correpta sub undi
Scuta virum, galeasque, et fortis corpora volvit
Virg., Aen. i., ver. 93
"In horror fix’ d the Trojan hero stands
He groans, and spreads to heaven his lifted hands
Thrice happy those whose fate it was to fall
Exclaims the chief, before the Trojan wall
O, ‘ twas a glorious fate to die in fight
To die so bravely in their parents’ sight
O, had I there, beneath Tydides’ hand
That bravest hero of the Grecian band
Pour’ d out this soul, with martial glory fired
And in the plain triumphantly expired
Where Hector fell, by fierce Achilles’ spear
And great Sarpedon, the renown’ d in war
Where Simois’ stream, encumber’ d with the slain
Rolls shields and helms and heroes to the main.
Pitt
Which die in the Lord - These are the only glorious dead. They die, not in the field of battle, in either what are called lawful or unlawful wars against their fellow men; but they die in the cause of God, they die under the smile and approbation of God, and they die to live and reign with God for ever and ever

Clarke: Rev 14:13 - -- From henceforth - Απαρτι· From this time; now; immediately. This word is joined to the following by many MSS. and some versions. It was a ma...
From henceforth -
Yea, saith the Spirit - The Holy Spirit confirms the declaration from heaven, and assigns the reasons of it

Clarke: Rev 14:13 - -- That they may rest from their labors - Have no more tribulation and distress
And their works do follow there - Εργα αυτων ακολου...
That they may rest from their labors - Have no more tribulation and distress
And their works do follow there -
There are some good and pertinent things in the Jewish writers on this subject. "Rabbi Jonathan taught, If a man perform one righteous action in this life, it goes before him into the world to come. But if a man commit one crime, it cleaves to him, and drags him to the day of judgment."Sota, fol. 3, 2. Avoda Sara, fol. 5, 1
"Come and see, If any man observe a precept, that work ascends to God, and says, Such a one performed me. But if a man transgress the law, that sin ascends to the holy blessed God, and says, I came from such a one, who has performed me."Sohar Levit., fol. 34, col. 136. Here the same personification is observed as that in the text
"In that hour in which a man passes from this life into eternity, all his works precede him; and there they say unto him, ‘ This and that thou hast done in such a place on such a day.’ This he shall acknowledge. They shall require that he shall subscribe this with his own hand, as it is written, Job 37:7; each man shall subscribe with his own hand; and not only this, but he shall acknowledge that the sentence brought against him is most just."Taanith, fol. 11, 1
The following elegant similitude Schoettgen gives from Sepher Hachayim, Part II., fol. 47, 1, 2. "A certain man had three friends, two of whom he loved; but the third he did not highly esteem. On a time the king commanded him to be called before him; and being alarmed, he sought to find an advocate. He went to that friend whom he loved most, but he utterly refused to go with him. The second offered to go with him as far as the door of the king’ s palace, but refused to speak a word in his behalf. The third, whom he loved least, not only went with him, but pleaded his cause so well before the king that he was cleared from all blame. In like manner, every man has three friends, when he is cited by death to appear before God. The first friend, whom he loved most, viz., his money, cannot accompany him at all. His second, viz., his relations and neighbors, accompanied him only to the grave, and then returned; but could not deliver him from the Judge. The third friend, whom he held but in little esteem, viz., the law and his good works, went with him to the king, and delivered him from judgment."The meaning of this most plainly is, that nothing except the deeds of good and evil men shall accompany them to the judgment-seat of God, and that a man’ s lot will be in the other world as his conduct has been in this; Their works follow with them.

Clarke: Rev 14:14 - -- A white cloud - It is supposed that, from this verse to the end of the chapter, the destruction of Rome is represented under the symbols of harvest ...
A white cloud - It is supposed that, from this verse to the end of the chapter, the destruction of Rome is represented under the symbols of harvest and vintage; images very frequent among the ancient prophets, by which they represented the destruction and excision of nations. See Joe 3:12-14; Isa 17:5; Isa 63:1; and Mat 13:37

A golden crown - In token of victory and regal power.

Thrust in thy sickle - Execute the judgments which God has decreed

Clarke: Rev 14:15 - -- For the harvest of the earth is ripe - The cup of the people’ s iniquity is full.
For the harvest of the earth is ripe - The cup of the people’ s iniquity is full.

Clarke: Rev 14:16 - -- The earth was reaped - The judgments were executed. But where, or on whom, who can tell?
The earth was reaped - The judgments were executed. But where, or on whom, who can tell?

Clarke: Rev 14:18 - -- Power over fire - Probably meaning the same angel which is mentioned, Rev 8:3; Rev 9:13, who stood by the altar of burnt-offering, having authority ...

Clarke: Rev 14:19 - -- The great winepress of the wrath of God - The place or kingdom where God executes his judgments on the workers of iniquity, whether pagans or persec...
The great winepress of the wrath of God - The place or kingdom where God executes his judgments on the workers of iniquity, whether pagans or persecuting Christians; Rome pagan, or Rome papal.

Clarke: Rev 14:20 - -- Even unto the horse bridles - A hyperbolical expression, to denote a great effusion of blood. The Jews said, "When Hadrian besieged the city called ...
Even unto the horse bridles - A hyperbolical expression, to denote a great effusion of blood. The Jews said, "When Hadrian besieged the city called Bitter, he slew so many that the horses waded in blood up to their mouths."The same kind of hyperbole with that above. See Wetstein on this verse

Clarke: Rev 14:20 - -- The space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs - It is said that the state of the Church, or St. Peter’ s patrimony, extends from Rome to the...
The space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs - It is said that the state of the Church, or St. Peter’ s patrimony, extends from Rome to the Po, two hundred Italian miles, which make exactly one thousand six hundred furlongs! If this be really so, the coincidence is certainly surprising, and worthy of deep regard
On these two last verses pious Quesnel thus speaks: "As the favorable sickle of Jesus Christ reaps his wheat when ripe for heaven, so that of the executioners of his justice cuts off from this life the tares which are only fit for the fire of hell. Then shall the blood of Christ cease to be trampled on by sinners; and that of the wicked shall be eternally trodden down in hell, which is the winepress of the wrath of God
"And the winepress was trodden without the city, eternally without the city of the heavenly Jerusalem, and far from the presence of God; eternally crushed and trodden down by his justice; eternally tormented in body and soul, without any hope either of living or dying! This is the miserable lot and portion of those who shall have despised the law of God, and died in impenitence. My God, pierce my heart with a salutary dread of thy judgments!
Whatever these passages may mean, this is a prudent and Christian use of them.
Defender: Rev 14:11 - -- A third angel quickly follows the first two, warning against receiving the mark of the beast. The doctrine of eternal punishment may be harsh, but it ...
A third angel quickly follows the first two, warning against receiving the mark of the beast. The doctrine of eternal punishment may be harsh, but it is true and reasonable as the just outcome for those who all their lives have spurned the grace and love of Christ and His offer of free salvation."

Defender: Rev 14:14 - -- The Lord Jesus has appeared to John in many different aspects of His person and work (Lamb, Rider, Angel), but here He returns to the first (and etern...
The Lord Jesus has appeared to John in many different aspects of His person and work (Lamb, Rider, Angel), but here He returns to the first (and eternal) aspect, as the Son of Man (Rev 1:13). He is ready to reap the harvest of the earth, separating the few remaining stalks of wheat from the great mass of tares, and this is a judgment committed to the Son of Man (Mat 13:41; Joh 5:27)."

Defender: Rev 14:15 - -- The temple here is probably the Jerusalem temple. The angel has seen the abomination in the holy place and so pleads with the Son of Man to proceed wi...
The temple here is probably the Jerusalem temple. The angel has seen the abomination in the holy place and so pleads with the Son of Man to proceed with His reaping. This reaping probably correlates with the ensuing bowl judgments."

Defender: Rev 14:18 - -- This angel apparently calls out from the altar of the earthly temple, urging that the vintage of the earth be trampled in the divine winepress (Joe 3:...
This angel apparently calls out from the altar of the earthly temple, urging that the vintage of the earth be trampled in the divine winepress (Joe 3:13; Rev 19:15). This time, the sickle of judgment is not used to reap a harvest of grain but rather to gather the vintage of grapes of the earth for the winepress of God."

Defender: Rev 14:20 - -- The scene here looks forward to the final slaughter of the beast's armies at Armageddon. There may well be a multitude of perhaps 200 million men (and...
The scene here looks forward to the final slaughter of the beast's armies at Armageddon. There may well be a multitude of perhaps 200 million men (and maybe women also) clustered together (compare Rev 9:16), with many horses and various items of military equipment, all massed in a great phalanx extending from below Bozrah, deep in Edom, up beyond Megiddo and the plain of Armageddon, through the valley of Jezreel, with its center in the Judaean wilderness opposite Jerusalem, in "the Valley of Jehoshaphat." The distance of 600 "furlongs" (Greek
the third : Rev 14:6-8; Jer 44:4
If : Rev 14:11, Rev 13:3-6, Rev 13:11-17

TSK: Rev 14:10 - -- drink : Rev 16:19, Rev 18:3; Job 21:20; Psa 11:6, Psa 60:3, Psa 75:8; Isa 29:9, Isa 51:17, Isa 51:21, Isa 51:22; Jer 25:15-17, Jer 25:27, Jer 51:57
in...
drink : Rev 16:19, Rev 18:3; Job 21:20; Psa 11:6, Psa 60:3, Psa 75:8; Isa 29:9, Isa 51:17, Isa 51:21, Isa 51:22; Jer 25:15-17, Jer 25:27, Jer 51:57
into : Rev 18:6; Psa 73:10; Isa 51:17; Jer 49:12; Lam 4:21; Hab 2:16; Mat 20:22; Mat 26:39
be : Rev 9:17, Rev 9:18, Rev 19:20, Rev 20:10, Rev 21:8; Gen 19:24; Deu 29:23; Job 18:15; Psa 11:6; Isa 30:33, Isa 34:9; Mat 25:41; Jud 1:7
in the : Psa 37:34, Psa 52:6, Psa 91:8; Eze 20:48; Mat 13:41, Mat 13:42, Mat 13:49, Mat 13:50; 2Th 1:8, 2Th 1:9

TSK: Rev 14:11 - -- smoke : Rev 18:18, Rev 19:3; Gen 19:28; Isa 33:14, Isa 34:10; Joe 2:30; Luk 16:23
for : Rev 4:9, Rev 4:10, Rev 5:13, Rev 5:14, Rev 7:12, Rev 11:15, Re...


TSK: Rev 14:13 - -- a voice : Rev 11:15, Rev 11:19, Rev 16:17; Mat 3:17
Write : Rev 1:11, Rev 2:1, Rev 10:4, Rev 19:9, Rev 21:5
Blessed : Rev 20:6; Ecc 4:1, Ecc 4:2; Isa ...
a voice : Rev 11:15, Rev 11:19, Rev 16:17; Mat 3:17
Write : Rev 1:11, Rev 2:1, Rev 10:4, Rev 19:9, Rev 21:5
Blessed : Rev 20:6; Ecc 4:1, Ecc 4:2; Isa 57:1, Isa 57:2; 2Co 5:8; Phi 1:21-23
die : Rom 14:8; 1Co 15:18; 1Th 4:14, 1Th 4:16, 1Th 5:10, from henceforth: Yea saith the Spirit, or, from henceforth saith the Spirit
Yea : rest, Rev 6:11, Rev 7:14-17; Job 3:17-19; Isa 35:10, Isa 57:2; Luk 16:25; 2Th 1:6, 2Th 1:7; Heb 4:9-11
and their : Psa 19:11, Psa 85:13; Mat 25:35-40; Luk 16:9; 1Co 15:58; Gal 6:7, Gal 6:8; Phi 2:17; 2Ti 4:7, 2Ti 4:8; Heb 6:10,Heb 6:11

TSK: Rev 14:14 - -- behold : Rev 14:15, Rev 14:16, Rev 1:7, Rev 10:1, Rev 20:11; Psa 97:2; Isa 19:1; Mat 17:5; Luk 21:27
like : Rev 1:13; Eze 1:26; Dan 7:13
a golden : Re...

TSK: Rev 14:15 - -- came : Rev 16:17
crying : Rev 6:10; Isa 62:1, Isa 62:6, Isa 62:7
Thrust : Rev 14:14
harvest : Rev 13:12; Jer 51:33; Joe 3:13; Mat 13:30,Mat 13:39
ripe...



TSK: Rev 14:18 - -- came : Rev 6:9, Rev 6:10
which : Rev 16:8
and cried : Rev 14:15, Rev 14:16
Thrust : Joe 3:13

TSK: Rev 14:20 - -- the winepress : Isa 63:1-3; Lam 1:15
without : Rev 11:8; Heb 13:11, Heb 13:12
and blood : Rev 19:14-21; Isa 34:5-7, Isa 66:24; Eze 39:17-21
the winepress : Isa 63:1-3; Lam 1:15
without : Rev 11:8; Heb 13:11, Heb 13:12
and blood : Rev 19:14-21; Isa 34:5-7, Isa 66:24; Eze 39:17-21

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Rev 14:9 - -- And the third angel followed them - This was a new vision designed to represent the removal of all the obstructions to the final prevalence of ...
And the third angel followed them - This was a new vision designed to represent the removal of all the obstructions to the final prevalence of the gospel. We are not necessarily to suppose that this event would succeed those mentioned before in the order of time, though this would be the natural construction. The design of this is to show that the worshippers of the beast and his image would be certainly and finally destroyed.
Saying with a loud voice - Making a loud proclamation. Rev 14:7.
If any man worship the beast and his image - See the notes on Rev 13:4, Rev 13:8, Rev 13:12, Rev 13:15. This declaration is universal, affirming of all who thus render idolatrous reverence to the power represented by the beast and his image that they should drink of the wine of the wrath of God. The general meaning is, that they were guilty of idolatry of a gross form; and wherever this existed they who were guilty of it would come under the denunciations in the Scriptures against idolaters. And why should not such denunciations fall on idolaters under the papacy as well as on others? Is it not true that there is as real idolatry there as in the pagan world? Is not the idolatry as gross and debasing? Is it not attended with as real corruption in the heart and the life? Is it not encompassed with as many things to inflame the passions, corrupt the morals, and alienate the soul from God? And is it not all the worse for being a perversion of Christianity, and practiced under the forms of the religion of the Saviour? On what principle should idolatry be denounced and condemned anywhere if it is not in papal Rome? Compare the notes on 2Th 2:4.
And receive his mark in his forehead or in his hand - See the notes on Rev 13:16. The word "receive"here implies that there was, on their part, some degree of voluntariness: it was not a mark impressed by force, but a mark received. This is true in respect to all idolatry; and this lays the ground for condemnation. Whatever art is used to induce people to worship the beast and his image, it is still true that the worshippers are voluntary, and that, being voluntary, it is right that they should be treated as such. It is on this ground only that any idolaters, or any sinners of any kind, can be, in the proper sense of that term, published.

Barnes: Rev 14:10 - -- The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God - See notes on Rev 14:8. The "wine of the wrath of God"is the cup in the hand of the Lord,...
The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God - See notes on Rev 14:8. The "wine of the wrath of God"is the cup in the hand of the Lord, which, when drunk, makes them reel and fall. The image would seem to have been taken from the act of holding out a cup of poison to a condemned man that he might drink and die. See the sentiment here expressed illustrated in the notes on Isa 51:17.
Which is poured out without mixture - Without being diluted with water - that is, in its full strength. In other words, there would be no mitigation of the punishment.
Into the cup of his indignation - The cup held in his hand, and given them to drink. This is expressive of his indignation, as it causes them to reel and fall. The sentiment here is substantially the same, though in another form, as what is expressed in 2Th 2:12. See the notes on that verse.
And he shall be tormented - Shall be punished in a manner that would be well represented by being burned with fire and brimstone. On the meaning of this word see the notes on Rev 9:5; Rev 11:10. Compare also Rev 18:7, Rev 18:10, Rev 18:15; Rev 20:10; Mat 8:29; Mar 5:7; Luk 8:28. The word commonly denotes "severe torture."
With fire and brimstone - As if with burning sulphur. See the notes on Luk 17:28-30. Compare Psa 11:6; Job 18:15; Isa 30:33; Eze 38:22. The imagery is taken from the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, Gen 19:24. The common representation of the punishment of the wicked is, that it will be in the manner here represented, Mat 5:22; Mat 13:42; Mat 18:9; Mat 25:41; Mar 9:44-48; 2Pe 3:7; Jud 1:7; Rev 20:14. Compare the Mat 5:22 note; Mar 9:44 note.
In the presence of the holy angels - This may mean either:
(a)\caps1 t\caps0 hat the angels will be present at their condemnation Mat 25:31, or.
(b)\caps1 t\caps0 hat the punishment will be actually witnessed by the angels, as it is most probable it will be. Compare Isa 66:24; Luk 16:23-26.
And in the presence of the Lamb - The Lamb of God - the final Judge. This also may mean either that the condemnation will occur in his presence, or that the punishment will be under his eye. Both of these things will be true in regard to him; and it will be no small aggravation of the punishment of the wicked, that it will occur in the very presence of their slighted and rejected Saviour.

Barnes: Rev 14:11 - -- And the smoke of their torment - The smoke proceeding from their place of torment. This language is probably derived from the account of the de...
And the smoke of their torment - The smoke proceeding from their place of torment. This language is probably derived from the account of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, Gen 19:28; "And he (Abraham) looked toward Sodom and Gomorrah, and toward all the land of the plain, and beheld, and lo, the smoke of the country went up as the smoke of a furnace."The destruction of these cities is regarded as an emblem of the destruction of the wicked, and the smoke that ascended from them as a representation of what ascends from the place where the wicked suffer forever. See the notes on Jud 1:7.
Ascendeth up - Continually rises from that world of woe.
For ever and ever - See the notes on Jud 1:7. This does not indeed affirm that their individual sufferings would be eternal, since it is only a declaration that "the smoke of their torment ascends,"but it is such language as would be used on the supposition that they would suffer forever, and as can be explained only on that supposition. It implies that their torments continued, and were the cause of that ascending smoke; that is, that they were tormented while it ascended; and, as this is declared to be "forever and ever,"it implies that the sufferings of the wicked will be eternal: and this is such language as would not, and could not have been used in a revelation from God, unless the punishment of the wicked is eternal. Compare the notes on Mat 25:46.
And they have no rest day nor night - "Day and night"include all time; and hence, the phrase is used to denote perpetuity - "always."The meaning here is, that they never have any rest - any interval of pain. This is stated as a circumstance strongly expressive of the severity of their torment. Here, rest comes to the sufferer. The prisoner in his cell lies down on his bed, though hard, and sleeps; the overworked slave has also intervals of sleep; the eyes of the mourner are locked in repose, and for moments, if not hours, he forgets his sorrows; no pain that we endure on earth can be so certain and prolonged that nature will not, sooner or later, find the luxury of sleep, or will find rest in the grave. But it will be one of the bitterest ingredients in the cup of woe, in the world of despair, that this luxury will be denied forever, and that they who enter that gloomy prison sleep no more, never know the respite of a moment, never even lose the consciousness of their heavy doom. Oh how different from the condition of sufferers here! And oh how sad and strange that any of our race will persevere in sin, and go down to those unmitigated and unending sorrows!
Who worship the beast and his image - See the notes on Rev 13:4, Rev 13:15.
And whosoever receiveth the mark of his name - See the notes on Rev 13:17. The meaning here is, that such worshippers will receive the punishment which other idolaters and sinners do. No exception will be made in favor of an idolater, though he worships idols under the forms of an abused Christianity; none will be made in favor of a sinner because he practiced iniquity under the garb of religion.

Barnes: Rev 14:12 - -- Here is the patience of the saints - See the notes on Rev 13:10. Here are they that keep the commandments of God - That is, in exercising...
Here is the patience of the saints - See the notes on Rev 13:10.
Here are they that keep the commandments of God - That is, in exercising such patience. Those who exercise that "patience"in these long-continued persecutions and trials, will show that they belong to those who keep the commandments of God, and are his true children. Or perhaps the meaning may be, "Here is a disclosure respecting the final destiny of these persecutors, which is adapted to comfort and sustain the saints in the trials which they will endure; an encouragement to constancy in obeying the commands of God, and in evincing the meek faith of the gospel."
And the faith of Jesus - To encourage persevering faith in the Saviour. In these times of trial it will be shown who are the friends of the Saviour; and in the prospect of the certain overthrow of all the enemies of God and his cause, there is a ground of encouragement for continued attachment to him.
The design of this portion of the chapter Rev 14:9-12 is to encourage Christians in their trials by the assurance, that this formidable anti-Christian power would be overthrown, and that all the enemies of God would receive their just doom in the world of despair. Fearful as that doctrine is, and terrible as is the idea of the everlasting suffering of any of the creatures of God, yet the final overthrow of the wicked is necessary to the triumph of truth and holiness, and there is consolation in the belief that religion will ultimately triumph. The desire for its triumph necessarily supposes that the wicked will be overthrown and punished; and indeed it is the aim of all governments, and of all administrations of law, that the wicked shall be overthrown, and that truth and justice shall prevail. What would be more consolatory in a human government than the idea that all the wicked would be arrested and punished as they deserve? For what else is government instituted? For what else do magistrates and police-officers discharge the functions of their office?

Barnes: Rev 14:13 - -- And I heard a voice from heaven - A voice that seemed to speak from heaven. Saying unto me, Write - Make a record of this truth. We may s...
And I heard a voice from heaven - A voice that seemed to speak from heaven.
Saying unto me, Write - Make a record of this truth. We may suppose that John was engaged in making a record of what he saw in vision; he was now instructed to make a record of what he heard. This passage may be referred to as a proof that he wrote this book while in Patmos, or as the heavenly disclosures were made to him, and not afterward from memory.
Blessed are the dead - That is, the condition of those who die in the manner which is immediately specified, is to be regarded as a blessed or happy one. It is much to be able to say of the dead that they are "blessed."There is much in death that is sad; we so much dread it by nature; it cuts us off from so much that is dear to us; it blasts so many hopes; and the grave is so cold and cheerless a resting place, that we owe much to a system of religion which will enable us to say and to feel, that it is a blessed thing to die. Assuredly we should be grateful for any system of religion which will enable us thus to speak of those who are dead; which will enable us, with corresponding feeling, to look forward to our own departure from this world.
Which die in the Lord - Not all the dead; for God never pronounces the condition of the wicked who die, blessed or happy. Religion guards this point, and confines the declaration to those who furnish evidence that they are prepared for heaven. The phrase "to die in the Lord"implies the following things:
(1) That they who thus die are the friends of the Lord Jesus. The language "to be in the Lord"is often used to denote true attachment to him, or close union with him. Compare Joh 15:4-7; Rom 16:13, Rom 16:22; 1Co 4:17; 1Co 7:39; Phi 1:14; Col 4:7. The assurance, then, is limited to those who are sincere Christians; for this the language properly implies, and we are authorized to apply it only as there is evidence of true religion.
(2)\caps1 t\caps0 o "die in the Lord"would seem also to imply that there should be, at the time, the evidence of his favor and friendship. This would apply:
\tx720 \tx1080 (a) to those who die as martyrs, giving their lives as a testimony to the truth of religion, and as an evidence of their love for it; and,
(b) to those who have the comforting evidence of his presence and favor on the bed of death.
From henceforth -
(a)\caps1 t\caps0 hey would die in an honorable cause;
(b)\caps1 t\caps0 hey would emerge from a world of sorrow; and,
©\caps1 t\caps0 hey would rise to eternal life and peace.
The design, therefore, of the verse is to impart consolation and support to those who would be exposed to a martyr’ s death, and to those who, in times of persecution, would see their friends exposed to such a death. It may be added that the declaration here made is true still, and ever will be. It is a blessed thing to die in the Lord.
Yea, saith the Spirit - The Holy Spirit; "the Spirit by whose inspiration and command I record this"(Doddridge).
That they may rest from their labours - The word rendered here "labor"-
And their works do follow them - That is, the rewards or the consequences of their works will follow them to the eternal world, the word works here being used for the rewards or results of their works. In regard to this, considered as an encouragement to labor, and as a support in the trials of life, it may be remarked:
(a)\caps1 t\caps0 hat all that the righteous do and suffer here will be appropriately recompensed there.
(b) This is all that can follow a man to eternity. He can take with him none of his gold, his lands, his raiment; none of the honors of this life; none of the means of sensual gratification. All that will go with him will be his character, and the results of his conduct here, and, in this respect, eternity will be but a prolongation of the present life.
© It is one of the highest honors of our nature that we can make the present affect the future for good; that by our conduct on the earth we can lay the foundation for happiness million of ages hence.
In no other respect does man appear so dignified as in this; nowhere do we so clearly see the grandeur of the soul as in the fact, that what we do today may determine our happiness in that future period, when all the affairs of this world shall which cannot now be numbered shall have rolled by. It is then a glorious thing to live, and will be a glorious thing to die. Compare the notes on 1Co 15:58.

Barnes: Rev 14:14 - -- And I looked - See the notes on Rev 14:1. His attention is arrested by a new vision. The Son of man himself comes forth to close the scene, and...
And I looked - See the notes on Rev 14:1. His attention is arrested by a new vision. The Son of man himself comes forth to close the scene, and to wind up the affairs of the world. This, too, is of the nature of an episode, and the design is the same as the previous visions - to support the mind in the prospect of the trials that the church was to experience, by the assurance that it would be finally triumphant, and that every enemy would be destroyed.
And behold a white cloud - Bright, splendid, dazzling - appropriate to be the seat of the Son of God. Compare the Mat 17:5 note; Rev 1:7 note. See also Mat 24:30; Mat 26:64; Luk 20:27; Act 1:9; 1Th 4:17; Rev 10:1.
And upon the cloud one sat like unto the Son of man - Compare the Rev 1:13 note; Dan 7:13 note. It is probable that there is here a designed reference to the passage in Daniel. The meaning is, that one appeared on the cloud in a human form, whom John at once recognized as he to whom the appellation of "the Son of man"especially belonged - the Lord Jesus. The meaning of that term had not been fixed in the time of Dan 7:13; subsequently it was appropriated by the Saviour, and was the favorite term by which he chose to speak of himself, Mat 8:20; Mat 9:6; Mat 10:23; Mat 11:19; Mat 12:8, Mat 12:32, Mat 12:40, et al.
Having on his head a golden crown - Appropriate to him as king. It was mainly in virtue of his kingly power and office that the work was to be done which John is now about to describe.
And in his hand a sharp sickle - The word "sickle"here -

Barnes: Rev 14:15 - -- And another angel - The fourth in order, Rev 14:6, Rev 14:8-9. Came out of the temple - See the notes on Rev 11:19. Came, as it were, fro...
And another angel - The fourth in order, Rev 14:6, Rev 14:8-9.
Came out of the temple - See the notes on Rev 11:19. Came, as it were, from the immediate presence of God; for the temple was regarded as his unique dwelling-place.
Crying with a loud voice to him that sat on the cloud - To the Messiah, Rev 14:14. That is, the command was borne directly from God by the angel to the Messiah, to go forth and reap the great harvest of the world. It is not a command of the angel, but a command from God the Father to the Son. This is in accordance with all the representations in the New Testament, that the Son, as Messiah or Redeemer, is subordinate to the Father, and performs the work which has been given him to do. See Joh 3:16-17; Joh 5:19; Joh 10:18; Joh 12:49; Joh 14:31. Compare the notes on Rev 1:1.
Thrust in thy sickle, and reap - Into the great harvest of the world.
For the time is come for thee to reap - That is, "the harvest which thou art to reap is ripe; the seed which thou hast sown has grown up; the earth which thou hast cultivated has produced this golden grain, and it is fit that thou shouldst now gather it in."This language is appropriately addressed to the Son of God, for all the fruits of righteousness on the earth may be regarded as the result of his culture.
For the harvest of the earth is ripe - The "harvest"in reference to the righteous - fruit of the good seed sown by the Saviour and his apostles and ministers. The time alluded to here is the end of the world, when the affairs of earth shall be about to he wound up. The design is to state that the Redeemer will then gather in a great and glorious harvest, and by this assurance to sustain the hearts of his people in times of trial and persecution.

Barnes: Rev 14:16 - -- And he that sat on the cloud - The Saviour, Rev 14:14. Thrust in his sickle on the earth - To cut down the harvest - that is, to gather h...
And he that sat on the cloud - The Saviour, Rev 14:14.
Thrust in his sickle on the earth - To cut down the harvest - that is, to gather his people to himself.
And the earth was reaped - So far as the righteous were concerned. The end had come; the church was redeemed; the work contemplated was accomplished; and the results of the work of the Saviour were like a glorious harvest.

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.

Barnes: Rev 14:18 - -- And another angel - The sixth in order. He came, like the angel in Rev 14:15, with a command to him who had the sickle to go forth and execute ...
And another angel - The sixth in order. He came, like the angel in Rev 14:15, with a command to him who had the sickle to go forth and execute his commission.
Came out from the altar - This stood in the front of the temple (see the notes on Mat 21:12; compare the notes on Mat 5:23-24), and was the place where burnt-sacrifices were made. As the work now to be done was a work of destruction, this was an appropriate place in the representation.
Which had power over fire - As if he kept the fire on the altar. Fire is the usual emblem of destruction; and as the work now to be done was such, it was proper to represent this angel as engaged in it.
And cried with a loud cry, ... - See Rev 14:15. That is, he came forth, as with a command from God, to call on him who was appointed to do the work of destruction, now to engage in performing it. The time had fully come.
Thrust in thy sharp sickle - Rev 14:15.
And gather the clusters of the vine of the earth - That portion of the earth which might be represented by a vineyard in which the grapes were to be gathered and crushed. The image here employed occurs elsewhere to denote the destruction of the wicked. See the very beautiful description in Isa 63:1-6, respecting the destruction of Edom, and the notes on that passage.
For her grapes are fully ripe - That is, the time has come for the ingathering; or, to apply the image, for the winding up of human affairs by the destruction of the wicked. The time here, as in the previous representation, is the end of the world; and the design is, to comfort the church in its trials and persecutions, by the assurance that all its enemies will be cut off.

Barnes: Rev 14:19 - -- And the angel thrust in his sickle into the earth - That is, into that part of the earth which might be represented by a vineyard; or the earth...
And the angel thrust in his sickle into the earth - That is, into that part of the earth which might be represented by a vineyard; or the earth considered as having been the abode of wicked men.
And cast it into the great wine-press of the wrath of God - See Isa 63:1-6. That is, the wine-press where the grapes are crushed, and where the juice, resembling blood, flows out, may be used as a symbol to denote the destruction of the wicked in the last day; and as the numbers will be immensely great, it is called the "great wine-press of divine wrath."The symbol appears to be used here alike with reference to the color of the wine resembling blood, and the pressure necessary to force it out; and thus employed it is one of the most striking emblems conceivable to denote the final destruction of the wicked.

Barnes: Rev 14:20 - -- And the wine-press was trodden without the city - The representation was made as if it were outside of the city - that is, the city of Jerusale...
And the wine-press was trodden without the city - The representation was made as if it were outside of the city - that is, the city of Jerusalem, for that is represented as the abode of the holy. The word "trodden"refers to the manner in which wine was usually prepared, by being trodden by the feet of people. See the notes on Isa 63:2. The wine-press was usually in the vineyard - not in the city - and this is the representation here. As appearing to the eye of John, it was not within the walls of any city, but standing without.
And blood came out of the wine-press - The representation is, that there would be a great destruction which would be well represented by the juice flowing from a wine-press.
Even unto the horse bridles - Deep, as blood would be in a field of slaughter where it would come up to the very bridles of the horses. The idea is, that there would be a great slaughter.
By the space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs - That is, two hundred miles; covering a space of two hundred miles square - a lake of blood. This is designed to represent a great slaughter; but why the space here employed to describe it was chosen is unknown. Some have supposed it was in allusion to the length of Palestine. Prof. Stuart supposes that it refers to the breadth of Italy, and that the allusion is to the attack made on the city of the beast. But it is impossible to determine why this space was chosen, and it is unnecessary. The idea is, that there would be a slaughter so great, as it were, as to produce a lake or sea of blood; that the enemies of the church would be completely and finally overthrown, and that the church, therefore, delivered from all its enemies, would be triumphant.
The "design"of this, as of the previous representations in this chapter, is to show that all the enemies of God will be destroyed, and that, therefore, the hearts of the friends of religion should be cheered and consoled in the trials and persecutions which were to come upon it. What could be better suited to sustain the church in the time of trial, than the assurance that every foe will be ultimately cut off? What is better suited to sustain the heart of the individual believer, than the assurance that all his foes will be quelled, and that he will ere long be safe in heaven?
Poole: Rev 14:9 - -- God letteth his servant John know, that during the reign and rage of antichrist, as he would have ministers of the gospel that should preach the tru...
God letteth his servant John know, that during the reign and rage of antichrist, as he would have ministers of the gospel that should preach the truth, and mind men to keep themselves from idols, worshipping God alone; and others that should assure them the papacy should go down, mystical Babylon should fall; so he would have others that should give warning to men and women of those dreadful plagues that should come upon them that entered themselves in this great city, either worshipping the devil after the pagan manner, or the image of the beast, i.e. committing idolatry after the antichristian, popish fashion, or that should either be subject to this idolatrous head, or be a soldier to fight for it. What those judgments should be, God showeth in Rev 14:10 , and possibly there is not a more severe denunciation of judgment in the whole book of God.

Poole: Rev 14:10 - -- Those that do yield a subjection to him, and profess his faith,
shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God that is, shall feel the severity of Go...
Those that do yield a subjection to him, and profess his faith,
shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God that is, shall feel the severity of God’ s judicial dispensations, which in Scripture are expressed by the wine cup of his fury, Jer 25:15 ; see also Job 21:20 Psa 75:8 Isa 51:17 ; either from the intoxicating quality of wine, or the stupifying quality of it, when mixed with myrrh, or other stupifying things. But here it is said without mixture, which signifies their sensible feeling of the effects of Divine wrath.
And he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb that is, in short, he shall go to hell at last; the exquisiteness of which torments, as to the pain of sense, is set out by fire and brimstone; brimstone being a material in which fire holds longest to torment any flesh put into it.

Poole: Rev 14:11 - -- And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever that is, their torments shall be everlasting, as well as most exquisite, and causing th...
And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever that is, their torments shall be everlasting, as well as most exquisite, and causing the most acute pain.
And they have no rest day nor night this is but the same thing in other words; their torments shall be such as shall give them no rest at any time.
Who worship the beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name: the sense of these two verses is no more than this: That all idolaters shall fall under the vengeance of God in this life, and at last shall be thrown to hell; not only such as worship the beast, committing paganish idolatry, worshipping stocks and stones, and devils, as the term of their worship, but such as worship the image of that beast set up by antichrist, worshipping of angels and saints, or their images. From hence an easy answer may be given to that question, Whether a man can be saved in that which at this day is called the Roman Catholic religion? If they either worship the beast, or the image of the beast, they cannot: whether they do or no, let the reader judge from what hath been before said.

Poole: Rev 14:12 - -- Here is the patience of the saints: God having in the former chapter shown his servant John the reign and rage of antichrist in his time of forty-two...
Here is the patience of the saints: God having in the former chapter shown his servant John the reign and rage of antichrist in his time of forty-two months, and in this chapter what shall be the end of him and all his adherents; here concludeth with telling him: This is a period of time wherein the patience of his holy ones will be tried, both in waiting for their deliverance, and also in their patient enduring antichrist’ s oppression and tyranny.
Here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus and here will be the trial of men, whether they will keep to the faith of Christ, and obedience of God’ s commandments, by coming out of, or keeping in, this spiritual Babylon: those that come out of her will show both; those that keep in that idolatrous communion will show neither.

Poole: Rev 14:13 - -- And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write: these words denote the excellency of the following saying; it is a voice from heaven, there...
And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write: these words denote the excellency of the following saying; it is a voice from heaven, therefore worthy of our attention. John is commanded to write it, to be kept in memory for the comfort and encouragement of God’ s people, who might be discouraged at the hearing of those calamitous times which they were like to meet with during the reign of antichrist, in which many of them were like to be put to death.
Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord: this phrase of dying in the Lord, is applicable to any persons that die united to Christ by a true and lively faith; all such die in the Lord. But if we consider the Scriptural usage of it, it seems rather to signify martyrs, such as die for the Lord; for
rest which their death will give them from the troubles of the calamitous times before or hereafter mentioned.
From henceforth: there is some little difference amongst interpreters about the sense of this particle: certain it is, it is not to be understood of the time following this revelation exclusively, as to those who before died to Christ; for they also were blessed, they also rested from their labours, &c.; yet the particle seems to refer to the time to come. The emphasis of the particle seems to be, to obviate the doubts of those who should happen to die under antichrist’ s rage, because they died not by the hands of pagans and avowed enemies of the gospel, but of such as should call themselves Christians; such, saith God, die for the Lord, and are blessed, and shall be blessed.
Yea, saith the Spirit the Spirit of truth affirms it.
That they may rest from their labours they shall be at rest from the troubles of this life.
And their works do follow them and their good deeds and patient sufferings shall follow them, as witnesses for them before the Judge of the quick and the dead.
Here follow two visions, the one of a harvest, the other of a vintage; there is no great difficulty in determining, that they both signify some judicial dispensations of God, that he would bring upon the world, or some part of it, the latter of which should be greater than the former: yet Dr. More and Mr. Mede have another notion of them. But there is some doubt amongst interpreters, whether they signify God’ s general judgment in the last day, or some particular judgments before that day, mentioned Rev 15:1-8 and Rev 16:1-21 , and belong to the vials which we there read of. Those who think that the last judgment is here showed to John, are led to it from the representation of the day of judgment, under the notion of a harvest, Mat 3:12 13:39 . But I rather agree with them who think that the harvest here mentioned, is a representation of some judicial dispensations of God before that time, particularly God’ s vengeance upon the beast, more fully expressed, Rev 16:1-21 . For:
1. The last judgment is fully described afterward, Rev 19:1-20:15 .
2. To express that, there needed not two types, the one of a harvest, the other of a vintage.
3. Here is no mention of the resurrection, which must go before the last judgment.
Mr. Mede hath noted, that there are three things belonging to a harvest;
(1.) Cutting down of corn.
(2.) Gathering it into the barn.
(3.) Threshing it.
Whence, in Scripture, it signifieth either cutting and destroying, or safety and preserving, which is the end of gathering corn into the barn. We have examples of the former, Isa 17:3,5 Jer 51:33 ; but of the latter we have only examples in the New Testament, Luk 10:2 . It is his opinion, that the conversion of the Jews, going before the great slaughter mentioned Rev 19:1-21 , is that which is here meant; but I rather agree with those who think, that by this parable is signified God’ s judgments upon antichrist, and that the general scope of both the parables is to declare, that God would grievously punish antichrist, first by lesser, then by greater judgments, as is more particularly expressed in the two next chapters, to which this, to me, seemeth prefatory. Let us now come to the text itself... See Poole on "Rev 14:14" .

Poole: Rev 14:14 - -- The description here can agree to none but Christ, sitting, as it were, upon clouds, and coming out in his judicial dispensations of providence, to ...
The description here can agree to none but Christ, sitting, as it were, upon clouds, and coming out in his judicial dispensations of providence, to execute judgment upon his enemies, to which purpose he is said to have
in his hand a sharp sickle

Poole: Rev 14:15 - -- Most interpreters understand this of the prayers of God’ s people, from the church, soliciting the Lord Jesus Christ (say some) to gather in th...
Most interpreters understand this of the prayers of God’ s people, from the church, soliciting the Lord Jesus Christ (say some) to gather in the Jews, or the number of his elect, the fields being now white to that harvest, (as Christ useth the metaphor of the Samaritans, Joh 4:35 ), or, (as others say, with whom I rather agree), to execute vengeance on antichrist and his adherents.

Poole: Rev 14:16 - -- According to the before mentioned different notion of the harvest, there is amongst them a different interpretation of this verse; some interpreting...
According to the before mentioned different notion of the harvest, there is amongst them a different interpretation of this verse; some interpreting it of God’ s calling in the Jews, or his elect, by the preaching of the gospel; others, of his vengeance upon antichrist and his adherents, more fully expressed, Rev 15:1-16:21 .

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 .

Poole: Rev 14:18 - -- From the altar the place of sacrifices and burnt-offerings.
Which had power over fire which had commission to execute God’ s judgments, compar...
From the altar the place of sacrifices and burnt-offerings.
Which had power over fire which had commission to execute God’ s judgments, compared to fire, Psa 11:6 21:9 1:3 .
And cried with a loud cry to him that had the sharp sickle, saying: God’ s holy ones cry unto him who hath a power to execute vengeance.
Thrust in thy sharp sickle, and gather the clusters of the vine of the earth put an end to the rage of antichrist, and gather those clusters which grew upon this vine of Sodom, and were as the clusters of Gomorrah.
For her grapes are fully ripe for their iniquities were come to the full, and they were now ripe for judgment. Our learned Dr. More expounds this ripeness, of a readiness for conversion, as well as for destruction, and thinks the first is here rather intended: the last words of the next verse incline me to judge otherwise.

Poole: Rev 14:19 - -- Dr. More thinks the sense of this is, that men were pressed in conscience upon the sharp conviction of Christ’ s powerful ministers, with sorro...
Dr. More thinks the sense of this is, that men were pressed in conscience upon the sharp conviction of Christ’ s powerful ministers, with sorrow for their sins, and so felt the wrath of God in them. But Mr. Mede, with whom (as to the sense of this text) I rather agree, tells us, that the treading of the vintage, in parabolical Scripture, constantly signifies a cruel, bloody, and deadly slaughter; he thinks that it is the same slaughter mentioned Rev 19:19-21 , as to which, Rev 14:15 , much the same metaphor is used, he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath, of Almighty God.

Poole: Rev 14:20 - -- And the winepress was trodden without the city: by the city, Dr. More thinks Babylon is here meant, and that the meaning is, that the powerful con...
And the winepress was trodden without the city: by the city, Dr. More thinks Babylon is here meant, and that the meaning is, that the powerful convictions of the word before mentioned, shall not reach Babylon, the Romish hierarchy and polity, as being hardened against any such thing. But Mr. Mede and others think, that the city of Jerusalem is here meant, or the Holy Land, which comprehends exactly one thousand six hundred furlong, that is, two hundred Italian miles, or one hundred and sixty Grecian miles. But what that place shall be, where this slaughter shall be, is a great secret.
And blood came out of the winepress, even unto the horse bridles, by the space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs: it is plain it shall be a great slaughter, by the depth of the blood mentioned, and the length of the ground which it should to that depth overflow. It is very probable, that great battle is meant, mentioned Rev 19:20,21 , in the place called Armageddon, upon the pouring out of the sixth vial, Rev 16:16 . In so difficult a business nothing can be positively determined.
PBC: Rev 14:9 - -- Re 14:9 And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, If any man worship the beast[1] and his image,[2] and receive his mark in his for...
Re 14:9 And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, If any man worship the beast[1] and his image,[2] and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand,
For a literal meaning of the beast and his image, let us go to the literal meaning of Christ and His Image. " And God said, Let us make man in our image,[3] after our likeness." {Ge 1:26} " So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them." {Ge 1:27} We find the word image defined in the Roman Letter. " For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren." {Ro 8:29} " And as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly." {1Co 15:49} The image of God and of Christ is righteousness and holiness. This was the first image of Adam which was lost through disobedience.
We can conclude that the same meaning is used for those who worship the beast and his image vs. those who worship Christ and His image. The mark in the forehead pertains to our mind and our thoughts. The mark in the right hand represents the deeds which we do here in this life. Knowledge and Works measure our lives.— Eld. Charles Taylor
[1] The meaning of the word beast is therion, thay-ree’-on; a dangerous animal:—(venomous, wild) beast.
[2] The meaning of image is eikon, I-kone’;a likeness, i.e. (literal) statute, profile, or (figurative) representation, resemblance:—image.
[3] Image tselem, tseh’-lem; i.e. (figurative) illusion, resemblance; hence a representative figure. Likeness demuwth, dem-ooth’;resemblance; concr. model, shape; like (- ness, as), manner, similitude.

PBC: Rev 14:10 - -- Those who worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, shall drink of the pure wrath (without mixture) of th...
Those who worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, shall drink of the pure wrath (without mixture) of the indignation of God. These fornicators, who had received the favor of Rome, now received the torment of fire and brimstone in the destruction of Jerusalem. Christ and the holy angels around the throne of God witnessed this scene. This gave great cause for rejoicing in heavenly places to learn that God had avenged His own.— Eld. Charles Taylor
[1] Those who worship the beast and receive his mark in the forehead and in the hand.

PBC: Rev 14:11 - -- When God’s wrath is poured out upon those who worship the beast and his image, and do the works of Satan, there is no rest. None can resist the wrat...
When God’s wrath is poured out upon those who worship the beast and his image, and do the works of Satan, there is no rest. None can resist the wrath of God, nor is there any rest day or night.— Eld. Charles Taylor

PBC: Rev 14:12 - -- Re 14:12 Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
The saints are given patience t...
Re 14:12 Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
The saints are given patience through keeping the commandments of God. Their faith in Jesus Christ is the source of this patience. They shall not be disillusioned by waiting for the work of God upon the ungodly.— Eld. Charles Taylor

PBC: Rev 14:13 - -- A proclamation is declared toward this patience of the saints. They are dead unto sin, but alive unto God through Christ Jesus. Wherever they go, thei...
A proclamation is declared toward this patience of the saints. They are dead unto sin, but alive unto God through Christ Jesus. Wherever they go, their works follow them.[1] They are known by the fruits of their labour.— Eld. Charles Taylor
[1] 1Th 1:9 " For they themselves show of us what manner of entering in we had unto you, and how ye turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God.

PBC: Rev 14:14 - -- Re 14:14 And I looked, and behold a white cloud, and upon the cloud one sat like unto the Son of man, having on his head a golden crown, and in his ha...
Re 14:14 And I looked, and behold a white cloud, and upon the cloud one sat like unto the Son of man, having on his head a golden crown, and in his hand a sharp sickle.
Here is the beginning of reaping. This One had been sitting and beholding the sins of His people who had wandered far from Him. Now the time was come that His wrath should encompass this city which had played the part of the harlot. This place where fornication had been the rule among those who pretended to carry on the work and will of God was ripe for harvest. The sickle was sharpened and ready to reap. No longer would these imposters have the opportunity to deceive. The Church Kingdom, wherein there was no visible temple, would reign.— Eld. Charles Taylor

PBC: Rev 14:15 - -- How could it be possible that an angel could command our Lord? This is a representation of the cries of those under the altar.[1] They had received ...
How could it be possible that an angel could command our Lord? This is a representation of the cries of those under the altar.[1] They had received the white robes and waited patiently for this occasion of the destruction of their tormentors.— Eld. Charles Taylor
[1] Re 6:9 " And when he had opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for the testimony which they held: And they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?"

PBC: Rev 14:16 - -- The Son of Man (Christ) is the reaper. When His sickle is thrust in, there is sudden reaping. Moreover, Christ’s reaping is effectual; the work He i...
The Son of Man (Christ) is the reaper. When His sickle is thrust in, there is sudden reaping. Moreover, Christ’s reaping is effectual; the work He intends to do is the work He does.— Eld. Charles Taylor

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

PBC: Rev 14:19 - -- Re 14:20 And the winepress was trodden without the city, and blood came out of the winepress, even unto the horse bridles, by the space of a thousand ...
Re 14:20 And the winepress was trodden without the city, and blood came out of the winepress, even unto the horse bridles, by the space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs.[1]
This great wrath of God was carried out by the legions of Titus, who were besieging the city. They were fast shedding the blood of those who had cast themselves into the role of defenders of Jerusalem. The figure of 1600 furlongs is used to show the terrible amount of bloodshed during the siege of Jerusalem. The angel which had the sharp sickle accomplished the great wrath of God. There are other interpretations of these events which place them as futuristic. However, I would again refer you to the message to John which called them " things which must shortly come to pass." Jesus speaking of Jerusalem, said, " Verily I say unto you, all these things shall come upon this generation." {Mt 23:36} —Eld. Charles Taylor
[1] Furlong -stadion, stad’-ee-on; (in plural) stadios, stad’-ee-os; (as fixed); a stade or certain measure of distance; by implication a stadium or race-course: furlong, race. [Zondervan’s Bible Dictionary calls a furlong a distance of about 606 feet.]
Haydock: Rev 14:9-10 - -- The third Angel followed....if any man shall adore the beast,...he also shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is mingled with pure wine, ...
The third Angel followed....if any man shall adore the beast,...he also shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is mingled with pure wine, &c. That is, he shall drink of the bitter cup of God's indignation, not mixed with water, or any thing to diminish its force, but with wine and wine; i.e. with punishments upon punishments for ever and ever. (Witham)

Haydock: Rev 14:12 - -- Here is the patience of the saints. Here patience is necessary, so as not to be carried away with such pleasures and vanities as are offered in the ...
Here is the patience of the saints. Here patience is necessary, so as not to be carried away with such pleasures and vanities as are offered in the wicked Babylon, and remain firm under persecutions with the pious inhabitants of Jerusalem. (Witham)

Haydock: Rev 14:13 - -- Blessed are the dead (all the dead) who die in the Lord, and not the martyrs only, for their works follow every one. (Witham) ---
It is understood...
Blessed are the dead (all the dead) who die in the Lord, and not the martyrs only, for their works follow every one. (Witham) ---
It is understood of the martyrs, who die for the Lord. (Challoner) ---
For their works follow them . It is just that they rest at length from their labours, and enjoy for eternity the recompense of their fidelity. They land on the shores of their native country, enriched with the treasures of the good works they have done in this lower world. This is said in express contradiction to those who denied the necessity of good works, and maintained the indifference of actions. This seems to have been the doctrine of the Nicolaites and other heretics of those times. (Calmet) ---
The Holy Ghost confirms the sentence of their happiness, not only because at the moment of their departure their hard labours and penitential works cease, but their souls are admitted to a glorious immorality, the recompense of their good works. (Pastorini)

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 14:9 - -- And the third angel followed them,.... The two preceding ones, and that very quickly; by whom is meant not Luther, and his associates in the Reformati...
And the third angel followed them,.... The two preceding ones, and that very quickly; by whom is meant not Luther, and his associates in the Reformation, as some think; nor his successors, or the ministers of the Gospel in general from his time till Christ's second coming, as others have thought; but a set of Gospel ministers in the spiritual reign of Christ: the first set of them publish the everlasting Gospel, which leads on to the ruin of antichrist; the second set proclaim the downfall of Rome, and this third set denounce the wrath of God upon all that have professed the Popish religion:
saying with a loud voice; as the first angel did, with like authority and vehemence, in order to strike terror, and express indignation:
if any man worship the beast and his image; give in to the idolatries of the church of Rome, and embrace, maintain, and defend the Popish religion, which bears a resemblance to the worship of the Heathens, and is the very image of Rome Pagan; see Rev 13:4
and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand; openly profess Popery, and swear allegiance to the man of sin, and do all they can to support his interest; see Rev 13:16.

Gill: Rev 14:10 - -- The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God,.... Which is a just punishment for their sin; that as such have drank of the wine of the wrath o...
The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God,.... Which is a just punishment for their sin; that as such have drank of the wine of the wrath of Rome's fornication, Rev 14:8 so they shall now drink of the wine of God's wrath; it is usual in Scripture to express the punishment God inflicts upon wicked men by his wrath, and by the wine cup of his fury; and their suffering such punishment, by their drinking of it; see Jer 25:15 so
which is poured out without mixture, into the cup of his indignation; sometimes called a cup of fury and of trembling, Isa 51:17 and is sometimes said to be full of mixture, Psa 75:8 of various ingredients of wrath and fury; and the words may be rendered here, "which is mixed without mixture": and though it seems to carry in it a contradiction, yet is true in different senses; it may be said to be mixed as wine with various sorts, which is the stronger, and sooner inebriates and intoxicates; or in allusion to the cup the Jews gave to malefactors, to stupefy them, when going to execution, which had various things put in it for that purpose; See Gill on Mar 15:23 and so designs the several ingredients in the cup of divine indignation, or the several ways in which God expresses his wrath; and yet it is without mixture; it is judgment without mercy, pure wrath, without the least allay; not so much as a drop of cold water granted, or the least your shown, or any mitigation of fury for a moment:
and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone: in allusion to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, which are now a burning and a sulphurous lake, called Asphaltites, and is an example, pattern, and similitude of the vengeance of eternal fire, Jud 1:7 and hence the beast and false prophet are said to be cast into such a lake, Rev 19:20 and here their followers will be punished; which is expressive of the horrible torments of hell, and the dreadful punishment of the antichristian party there; see Psa 11:6 and what will aggravate their misery is, that it will be
in the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb; the latter will be their Judge, and will condemn them to everlasting burnings, and pronounce the sentence on them; and the former will be the executioners of it; they will gather them out, and sever them from the righteous, and cast them into the furnace of fire, and will be spectators of their punishment, and rejoice at it; and the sight of their power and glory will increase the torment of the sufferers.

Gill: Rev 14:11 - -- And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever,.... That is, the smoke of that fire which torments them will for ever arise; or, in oth...
And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever,.... That is, the smoke of that fire which torments them will for ever arise; or, in other words, there will be no end of their torment; hence their misery is called everlasting fire, everlasting punishment, and everlasting destruction, Mat 25:41 and smoke being very troublesome and distressing, is mentioned to set forth the very uncomfortable state of the wicked; and so it is used by Jewish writers: hence we read of
and they have no rest, day nor night; the fire of divine wrath which tortures them is never quenched, and the worm of conscience which gnaws them never dies: this is directly contrary to a notion of the Jews, that the wicked in hell have rest sometimes; they talk of angels blowing away the smoke from them, so that they have rest an hour and a half; and which they say they have three times a day, and whenever Israel says Amen, let his great name be blessed s; and particularly that hell fire never burns on the sabbath day, nor does the smoke of it ascend then, and that the wicked have always rest on that days t; though sometimes they contradict themselves, and say they never have any rest u, which is the truth:
who worship the beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name; that is, whoever are the followers of antichrist, or the professors of the Popish religion; so far is salvation from being in the church of Rome, and only there, that there is none in it; and whoever live and die in the profession of Popery, shall surely be damned as this passage is true.

Gill: Rev 14:12 - -- Here is the patience of the saints,.... That which has required their patience, and about which it has been exercised, what they have been patiently w...
Here is the patience of the saints,.... That which has required their patience, and about which it has been exercised, what they have been patiently waiting for, namely, the destruction of antichrist; and now it will be come, and patience will have its perfect work; see Rev 13:10
here are they that keep the commandments of God; and not the inventions of men, and the traditions of antichrist, but the ordinances of the Gospel, as they were at first delivered, without any adulteration and corruption; and who kept them because they were enjoined by God, and from a principle of love to him, and with a view to his glory: these are distinguished from the worshippers of the beast, and were preserved throughout the apostasy; these are the witnesses who will now be risen, and the remnant of the woman's seed, with whom the dragon made war by the beast: and these are the hundred and forty and four thousand who are before described; these will be in a very glorious and comfortable church state; the word will be purely preached, and the ordinances truly administered, and the doctrines of the Gospel will be heartily embraced and professed: it follows,
and the faith of Jesus; meaning either the grace of faith, of which Jesus is the object, author, and finisher; and which these saints will have from him, and exercise upon him in a very strong and comfortable manner; and which, and the profession of it, they will hold fast to the end; or else the doctrine of faith, concerning the person, office, and grace of Jesus Christ, the faith once delivered to the saints, which they will have contended for, stood fast in, and now will hold in a pure conscience: these seem to be the words of John, declaring the faith, patience, and obedience of the saints of these times.

Gill: Rev 14:13 - -- And I heard a voice from heaven,.... Like that which was heard at Christ's baptism and transfiguration, certifying the truth of what follows, so that ...
And I heard a voice from heaven,.... Like that which was heard at Christ's baptism and transfiguration, certifying the truth of what follows, so that that may be depended upon as an undoubted verity:
saying unto me, write; which is a further confirmation of the following sayings being true and faithful; see Rev 1:9
blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth; merely to die is not an happiness, for death is common to all, good and bad; it is a disunion of soul and body, and cannot be in itself desirable; it is the fruit of sin, and has something in it awful and terrible; and though it is the privilege of believers, as its sting is removed by Christ, yet not as simply and absolutely considered; but to die in the Lord is a blessedness: some render the words, "which die for the Lord"; so the Arabic version, "which die for the faith of the Lord"; and the Ethiopic version, "which die for God"; and so restrain them to the martyrs of Jesus: to suffer death for the sake of Christ and his Gospel is a gift and an honour, and what glorifies Christ; and there is a glory consequent upon it, which such shall enjoy; but then in the spiritual reign of Christ, to which this passage refers, and after the destruction of antichrist, there will be no more suffering for Christ, no more martyrdoms; wherefore this cannot be the sense of the words: nor do they mean dying in the lively exercise of faith and hope in the Lord; for though it is a happiness so to die, both to persons themselves, and to their friends and relations, yet these are not the only persons that are blessed; there are some who all their lifetime are subject to bondage, and go off in the dark, and yet are happy; but to die in the Lord is to die interested in him, in union to him; which union is not dissolved by death, and which preserves from all condemnation, at death or at judgment, and secures the soul's immediate entrance into happiness, and the resurrection of the body at the last day, and therefore such must be blessed: the phrase, "from henceforth", is differently placed; the Ethiopic version connects it with the word "write", rendering it, "write now"; and the Vulgate Latin version reads it with the next clause, "hereafter, yea, saith the Spirit"; and so the Latin interpreter of the Syriac version, though that itself seems rather to place it as ours does, and which is most correct; and is to be understood not of the time of John's writing, thenceforward to the resurrection; for those that died before his time were as happy as those who died after; nor of the time of death, though it is a truth, that from the time of the saints' death, and from the very moment of their separation, they are blessed, and are in a state of happiness until the resurrection; but of that period of time which the declarations made by the three preceding angels refer to, from thenceforward, and after the destruction of antichrist, and during the spiritual reign of Christ: and the sense is, that happy will those persons be that die in Christ within that time, and before the Laodicean church state takes place; when coldness, lukewarmness, and carnal security will seize upon men, and Christ will come upon them at an unawares; and those sharp and severe times will commence, signified by the harvest and vintage of the earth in the following verses, and which seem to be no other than the end of the world, and the destruction of it; wherefore happy will they be that are going to heaven before that time comes; see Ecc 4:1
yea, saith the Spirit; the third witness in heaven, who sets his seal to the truth of what the voice declares, and shows wherein this blessedness will consist:
that they may rest from their labours; both of body and soul; from all toil of body, and laborious work, from all diseases and distempers of body, and all outward sorrows and calamities men labour under, and are fatigued with in this life; and from all inward troubles, from a body of sin, from the temptations of Satan, and from all doubts and fears, from their present warfare state, and all conflicts with their spiritual enemies:
and their works do follow them; they do not go before them, to prepare heaven and happiness for them; nor do they take them along with them, and use them as pleas for their admission into the heavenly glory; but they will follow them, and will be found to praise, and honour, and glory, and will be taken notice of by Christ, and graciously rewarded by him, at his appearing and kingdom. This is directly opposite to the notions of the Jews, who say, that when a man departs this life, his works "go before him", and say unto him, thou hast done so and so, in such a place, and on such a day w; and that whoever does a good work in this world, it shall "go before him" in the world to come x; and so they y represent good works as saying to a man when he is about to die,
"go in peace; before thou gettest thither,
Sometimes they say z, they go along with him at the time of a man's departure: neither gold, nor silver, nor precious stones and pearls accompany him, but the law and good works, as it is said, Pro 6:22 "when thou goest it shall lead thee", &c.

Gill: Rev 14:14 - -- And I looked, and behold a white cloud,.... In this verse is a description of the person principally concerned in the harvest of the earth, hereafter ...
And I looked, and behold a white cloud,.... In this verse is a description of the person principally concerned in the harvest of the earth, hereafter mentioned; by whom is designed not some great potentate or prince, an encourager of the Reformation among his subjects; nor an angel in an human shape; nor Martin Luther, as others; but the Lord Jesus Christ himself, who is described by his form, and by his seat, and by what he had on his head, and in his hand:
and upon the cloud one sat like unto the son of man; so Christ is said to be, Rev 1:13 and in Dan 7:13 where there is a like vision of him as here, and which refers to the same time; it is a name by which the Messiah is often called, and is expressive of the truth of his human nature, who was found in fashion as a man, and was really one; for his being like to the son of man designs reality and truth, and not mere appearance; see Mat 14:5 and besides, as this was in vision, it is very properly expressed, for Christ appeared to John in vision like to that human nature in which he is at the right hand of God: and here he is seen "sitting" upon the "white cloud"; which shows that he was come to judgment in the clouds of heaven, and was set on one of them, as on a throne; and a white cloud represents the purity, uprightness, and justness of his proceedings in judgment; for which reason he is said to be on a white throne, Rev 20:11
having on his head a golden crown; as an ensign of royal majesty, showing that his kingdom was now come, the time for him to reign personally with his saints on earth a thousand years; and that it was a very glorious one; and that he should now reign before his ancients gloriously; and that it was pure, solid, and durable; see Psa 21:4
and in his hand a sharp sickle: to reap the earth with, as hereafter, and is expressive of his power as King of saints and Judge of the world, to gather all nations before him; for the sickle is used to gather with, as well as to cut down.

Gill: Rev 14:15 - -- And another angel came out of the temple,.... Not the Holy Spirit, who, being God omniscient, knows the day and hour of judgment, which is a secret to...
And another angel came out of the temple,.... Not the Holy Spirit, who, being God omniscient, knows the day and hour of judgment, which is a secret to men and angels, as Napier thinks; since though he dwells in the church as his temple, yet is never called an angel; nor does this angel represent the souls under the altar, who come out from thence, and importunately desire vengeance on the inhabitants of the earth, the worshippers of the beast, who had shed their blood; but rather the mighty angels who shall descend from heaven with Christ, and who shall be employed by him as reapers, to gather in his elect from the four winds, as well as to bind up the tares in bundles, and burn them; unless a set of Gospel ministers, as before, should be intended, who either by divine revelation, or by the signs of the time being come, and observed by them, will know that the harvest, or end of the world, is come; since this angel is said to come out of the temple, the church, which had been measured, and was now opened in heaven, and from whence angels are said to come, Rev 11:1
crying with a loud voice to him that sat on the cloud: as the first and third angels did, Rev 14:7 denoting great vehemence and importunity: thrust in thy sickle, and reap: which being spoken by an inferior angel, whether this designs the ministering spirits, or preachers of the word, must be understood not as commanding, nor even directing what should be done, but as beseeching and entreating: see Psa 132:8. Dr. Lightfoot thinks, and not without reason, that there is here some allusion to the putting in of the sickle, and reaping the first corn in Judea, at the feast of the passover, by the order of the sanhedrim, which sat in the temple; nor did any reap till they had the word given them, "reap", by the messengers of the court, called
for the time is come for thee to reap; the time of the end of the world, and of the judgment of it, which is fixed by God; and of Christ's coming to judge both quick and dead, and of the first resurrection, or the resurrection of the saints:
for the harvest of the earth is ripe: the measure of the sins of wicked men will now be filled up, and the afflictions of the saints will be accomplished in them, and the number of God's elect will be completed in the effectual calling; they will be all called, and so things will be ripe for the second coming of Christ. There seems to be some reference to Joe 3:13 "put ye in the sickle, for the harvest is ripe": the Jewish doctors ask b, to whom is this said? R. Phineas, in the name of R. Hilkiah, says,

Gill: Rev 14:16 - -- And he that sat on the cloud thrust in his sickle on the earth,.... He put forth, and made use of that power which he had in his hand, in answer to th...
And he that sat on the cloud thrust in his sickle on the earth,.... He put forth, and made use of that power which he had in his hand, in answer to the entreaty of the angel, the time being fully come which was fixed for this great event:
and the earth was reaped; and the harvest of it was got in; reaping and harvest sometimes are used in an ill sense, and design the wrath of God, and his judgments inflicted upon men; see Isa 17:5. Hence some think, that both this and the vintage following intend the judgments of God upon antichrist, and that they are contemporary with the pouring out of the fifth and sixth vials upon the beast and his followers; and the rather, since the destruction of Babylon, literally taken, is expressed in such language, Jer 51:33 though these seem to have respect to times after the fall of the Romish Babylon, before declared in Rev 14:8 and most interpreters refer the harvest to the last judgment at the end of the world; and which sense is greatly countenanced, and to be illustrated by the parable of the tares and wheat, in Mat 13:30 sometimes these phrases are used in a good sense, and intend the gathering in of souls by the preaching of the Gospel; as there are the appointed weeks of the harvest, so there is a time fixed for the calling and conversion of God's elect; and when this time is come, and especially to any number of them in any particular place, it is an harvest, as in Galilee and Samaria in the times of Christ, Mat 9:37 the reapers are the ministers of the Gospel; such were the apostles of Christ, Joh 4:36 and the sickle is the Gospel, by which not only men are cut to the heart, and cut down, and removed from their old bottom, and principles and practices, but are gathered to Christ, and into his churches; and when large numbers are brought in, it is an harvest time, as in the times of Christ and his apostles; see Isa 9:1 hence some interpreters think that the harvest here has respect to the Reformation, which followed upon the preaching of Luther, Calvin, and others, when a large harvest of souls were gathered in, in Germany, France, England, and elsewhere; but rather it may be thought to refer to the conversion of the Jews, and the bringing in the fulness of the Gentiles in the latter day, in the spiritual reign of Christ, to which the preceding visions belong, as we have seen; the earth will be reaped indeed, and a great harvest it will be, when a nation shall be born at once, and the vast multitudes of the Gentiles shall be brought in, as in Isa 66:8 and the rather this may be judged to be the meaning of it, since the passage from whence these phrases are borrowed respects the bringing again the captivity of Judah and Jerusalem, Joe 3:1 though it seems best to understand it of the Lord's wheat harvest at the end of the world, when the wheat of the earth shall be reaped, and gathered into Christ's barn, or garner, or into his and his Father's kingdom; this reaping of the earth is the removing of the saints out of it, not by death, but by the resurrection of them from the dead; for when Christ shall come in the clouds of heaven, and sit on the white cloud, or throne, the dead in him will rise first, and the living saints will be changed, and both will be caught up together, to meet the Lord in the air; so that the earth will be reaped, and be clear of them, and there will be none left in it but the wicked of the world; and what will become of them is declared in the following verses, under the representation of a vintage.

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.

Gill: Rev 14:18 - -- And another angel came out from the altar,.... Where are the souls of the martyrs of Jesus, Rev 6:9 and whom this angel is thought by some to represen...
And another angel came out from the altar,.... Where are the souls of the martyrs of Jesus, Rev 6:9 and whom this angel is thought by some to represent, in his address to him that had the sharp sickle, crying for vengeance on the wicked of the earth, who had shed their blood: the allusion seems to be to the altar of burnt offerings, where the sacrifices were slain, and on which they were burnt with fire; and which was an emblem of the strict justice of God, showing, that those persons, for whom these sacrifices were offered, deserved to be treated in like manner; and here the angel coming from thence signifies, that he came on the behalf of the justice of God, treating that he, to whom vengeance belonged, would execute it upon all the ungodly, who were ripe for judgment: and hence it is further said of him,
which had power over fire; whether the angels, as they have presided over particular kingdoms and states, Dan 10:20 preside over the elements, since this angel had power over fire, and another angel is called the angel of the waters, Rev 16:5 may be considered. According to the Jews c there are
And cried with a loud cry to him that had the sharp sickle, as in Rev 14:15 expressing like vehemence and importunity,
saying, thrust in thy sharp sickle: not commanding or directing, but entreating as before:
and gather the clusters of the vine of the earth; not the vine of God's planting, the vineyard of the Lord of hosts, the church of Christ; but the vine of the earth, of wicked and earthly men, whose vine is the vine of Sodom, &c. Deu 32:32 and which is spread over the whole earth; a wild vine, whose grapes are gall, clusters bitter, and their wine the poison of dragons; and to such a vine the wicked are compared, for their emptiness and unfruitfulness, their uselessness and unprofitableness, and for their being fit fuel for everlasting burnings; see Eze 15:2. And the clusters of it may denote the great multitude of the wicked now to be cut down, gathered in, and destroyed, the reason given,
for her grapes are fully ripe; their wickedness very great, their iniquity full, the measure of their sins filled up, and they fitted for destruction, and ripe for ruin; see Joe 3:13. Some understand this of the degenerate church of Rome, and the destruction of it; see Rev 19:15.

Gill: Rev 14:19 - -- And the angel thrust in his sickle into the earth,.... Before "upon the earth", when the harvest was gathered in, the wheat being on the earth, but no...
And the angel thrust in his sickle into the earth,.... Before "upon the earth", when the harvest was gathered in, the wheat being on the earth, but not belonging to it; but here "into the earth", the vine being the vine of the earth, rooted in it, and natural to it:
and gathered the vine of the earth; the Arabic version reads, "of the whole earth"; in like manner as the tares in the parable are said to be gathered, and bound in bundles, and cast into the fire, which, as here, intends the destruction of the wicked, at the end of the world: this vine may be said to be cut down at the burning of the world, and to be gathered at the second resurrection, as the wheat harvest of the saints will be at the first resurrection:
and cast it into the great winepress the wrath of God; the same with the lake which burns with fire and brimstone, so often mentioned in this book: the torments of the wicked will lie in the wrath of God being poured forth upon them, and into them, which will be that fire that cannot be quenched, and that worm that never dies; and this is signified by the squeezing of grapes in a winepress, as God's judgments in this world sometimes are, Isa 63:3 and which will be very heavy and intolerable, since this winepress will be trod by the Lord God Almighty: and it is said to be a great one, as it must needs be, to hold the vine of the whole earth, or all the wicked of the world, who will be like the sand of the sea, innumerable; and this will be big enough for them all, and they will all be cast into it at once. Tophet is deep and large, Isa 30:33.

Gill: Rev 14:20 - -- And the winepress was trodden without the city,.... The beloved city, the new Jerusalem, into which none of the wicked will enter, and without which a...
And the winepress was trodden without the city,.... The beloved city, the new Jerusalem, into which none of the wicked will enter, and without which are dogs, &c. Rev 20:9. The allusion may be, as Dr. Lightfoot thinks, to the olive presses, which were without the city of Jerusalem, from whence Gethsemane had its name, whither our Lord went, and where his sorrows began the night he was betrayed: hell is sometimes expressed by outer darkness, and said to be far off from heaven, and between the one and the other a great gulf is fixed, the distance is considerable; hence men are said to go forth to behold the miseries of the wicked; see Mat 22:13.
and blood came out of the winepress; alluding to the juice squeezed out of grapes, called the blood of grapes, Gen 49:11.
Even unto the horses' bridles, for the space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs; which is only an hyperbolical expression, setting forth the largeness and universality of the destruction of the wicked, and the impossibility of their escaping it. In like manner the Jews express a great slaughter of men; so of the slaughter at Bither, by Adrian, they say e, they went on slaying
the space of a thousand and six hundred furlongs, perhaps there may be an allusion to the measure of the land of Israel, and the common notion of it among the Jews, who make it to be the square of four hundred parsoe f: hence they often speak of the land of Israel shaking and moving four hundred "parsoe", upon some extraordinary occasions g; and a "parsa" contained four miles h, so that four hundred "parsoe" made a thousand and six hundred miles; and if miles and furlongs are the same, in which sense only the land of Israel could be so large, here is the exact space; for Jerom i, who was an inhabitant of it, says, it was scarce 160 miles in length, to which agrees R. Menachem k; and it may be observed, that the Arabic version renders the words, "by the space of a thousand and six hundred miles". The Ethiopic version, very wrongly, reads, "sixteen furlongs".

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Rev 14:9; Rev 14:9; Rev 14:9; Rev 14:9; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:10; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:11; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:12; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:13; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:14; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:15; Rev 14:16; Rev 14:17; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:18; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:19; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20; Rev 14:20



NET Notes: Rev 14:12 Grk “faith of Jesus.” The construction may mean either “faith in Jesus” or “faithful to Jesus.” Either translation...


NET Notes: Rev 14:14 Grk “like a son of man, having.” In the Greek text this is a continuation of the previous sentence.


NET Notes: Rev 14:16 Here καί (kai) has been translated as “so” to indicate the implied result of the angel’s directions.

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


NET Notes: Rev 14:19 Although the gender of μέγαν (megan, masc.) does not match the gender of ληνόν (lhnon, fem.) it has ...

NET Notes: Rev 14:20 Grk “1,600 stades.” A stade was a measure of length about 607 ft (185 m). Thus the distance here would be 184 mi or 296 km.
Geneva Bible: Rev 14:9 And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, ( 7 ) If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive [his] mark in his forehead,...

Geneva Bible: Rev 14:12 ( 8 ) Here is the patience of the saints: here [are] they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
( 8 ) The patience, sanctificati...

Geneva Bible: Rev 14:13 And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write, Blessed [are] the dead which die ( b ) in the Lord from henceforth: Yea, saith the Spirit, that...

Geneva Bible: Rev 14:14 ( 9 ) And I looked, and behold a ( 10 ) white cloud, and upon the cloud [one] sat like unto the Son of man, ( 11 ) having on his head a golden crown, ...

Geneva Bible: Rev 14:15 ( 13 ) And another angel came out of the temple, crying with a loud voice to him that sat on the cloud, Thrust in thy sickle, and reap: for the time i...

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...

Geneva Bible: Rev 14:20 And the winepress was trodden without the city, ( 15 ) and blood came out of the winepress, even unto the horse bridles, by the space of a thousand [a...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Rev 14:1-20
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 14:6-13; Rev 14:14-20
MHCC: Rev 14:6-13 - --The progress of the Reformation appears to be here set forth. The four proclamations are plain in their meaning; that all Christians may be encouraged...

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 14:6-12; Rev 14:13-20
Matthew Henry: Rev 14:6-12 - -- In this part of the chapter we have three angels or messengers sent from heaven to give notice of the fall of Babylon, and of those things that were...

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 14:9-12 - --Warning has already been given of the power of the beast and of the mark that the beast will seek to set upon all men (Rev 13 ). Now there is warning...

Barclay: Rev 14:13 - --After the terrible prophecies of the terrors to come and the terrible warnings to those who are false, there comes the gracious promise.
Blessed are ...

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 14:6-13 - --Four climactic announcements 14:6-13
"And I saw" (Gr. kai eidon) signals another scene o...

Constable: Rev 14:9-12 - --The fate of beast-worshippers 14:9-12
14:9 A third angel followed the former two with a third message in this sequence warning the beast-worshippers o...

Constable: Rev 14:13 - --The blessedness of those who die in Christ 14:13
This "voice" was probably the L...
