collapse all  

Text -- Revelation 16:16 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
16:16 Now the spirits gathered the kings and their armies to the place that is called Armageddon in Hebrew.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Armageddon a large plain overlooked on the south west by the Carmel Mountain Range which has the town of Megiddo in its foot hills.
 · Hebrew Language an ancient Jewish language used in the Old Testament


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wicked | WAR; WARFARE | Vision | Temple | TONGUE | REVELATION OF JOHN | RETRIBUTION | Plague | Josiah | Jesus, The Christ | Hebrew Language | HEBREW; HEBREWESS | HARMAGEDON | HAR-MAGEDON | Good and Evil | ESDRAELON, PLAIN OF | Armageddon | Aramaic Language | Angel | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

Other
Evidence

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Rev 16:16 - -- They gathered ( sunēgagen ). Second aorist active indicative of sunagō , singular (the three unclean spirits), like ekporeuetai in Rev 16:14.

They gathered ( sunēgagen ).

Second aorist active indicative of sunagō , singular (the three unclean spirits), like ekporeuetai in Rev 16:14.

Robertson: Rev 16:16 - -- Har-Magedon ( HaṙMagedōn ). John proceeds now after the interruption in Rev 16:15. Perhaps "the mountains of Megiddo"though not certain. Megiddo ...

Har-Magedon ( HaṙMagedōn ).

John proceeds now after the interruption in Rev 16:15. Perhaps "the mountains of Megiddo"though not certain. Megiddo is in the valley of Esdraelon, and by the waters of Megiddo (the Kishon) Israel gained a decisive victory over Sisera (Jdg 5:19), celebrated in Deborah’ s song. See also Rev 20:8. and Eze 39:2, Eze 39:4.

Vincent: Rev 16:16 - -- Armageddon The proper Greek form Ἃρ Μαγεδών . The word is compounded of the Hebrew Har mountain , and Megiddon or Megiddo : ...

Armageddon

The proper Greek form Ἃρ Μαγεδών . The word is compounded of the Hebrew Har mountain , and Megiddon or Megiddo : the mountain of Megiddo . On Megiddo standing alone see Jdg 1:27; 1Ki 4:12; 1Ki 9:15; 2Ki 9:27. See also Jdg 5:19; Zec 12:11; 2Ch 35:22; 2Ki 23:30. " Bounded as it is by the hills of Palestine on both north and south, it would naturally become the arena of war between the lowlanders who trusted in their chariots, and the Israelite highlanders of the neighboring heights. To this cause mainly it owes its celebrity, as the battle-field of the world, which has, through its adoption into the language of Revelation, passed into an universal proverb. If that mysterious book proceeded from the hand of a Galilean fisherman, it is the more easy to understand why, with the scene of those many battles constantly before him, he should have drawn the figurative name of the final conflict between the hosts of good and evil, from the 'place which is called in the Hebrew tongue Harmagedon'" (Stanley, " Sinai and Palestine" ).

Megiddo was in the plain of Esdraelon, " which has been a chosen place for encampment in every contest carried on in Palestine from the days of Nabuchodonozor king of Assyria, unto the disastrous march of Napoleon Buonaparte from Egypt into Syria. Jews, Gentiles, Saracens, Christian crusaders, and anti Christian Frenchmen; Egyptians, Persians, Druses, Turks, and Arabs, warriors of every nation that is under heaven, have pitched their tents on the plain of Esdraelon, and have beheld the banners of their nation wet with the dews of Tabor and Hermon" (" Clarke's Travels," cit. by Lee). See Thomson's " Land and Book" (Central Palestine and Phoenicia), p. 208 sqq.; and Stanley, " Sinai and Palestine," ch. ix.

Two great slaughters at Megiddo are mentioned in the Old Testament; the first celebrated in the Song of Deborah (Jdg 5:19), and the second, that in which king Josiah fell (2Ki 23:29). Both these may have been present to the seer's mind; but the allusion is not to any particular place or event. " The word, like Euphrates, is the expression of an idea; the idea that swift and overwhelming destruction shall overtake all who gather themselves together against the Lord" (Milligan).

Wesley: Rev 16:16 - -- Mageddon, or Megiddo, is frequently mentioned in the Old Testament. Armageddon signifies the city or the mountain of Megiddo; to which the valley of M...

Mageddon, or Megiddo, is frequently mentioned in the Old Testament. Armageddon signifies the city or the mountain of Megiddo; to which the valley of Megiddo adjoined. This was a place well known in ancient times for many memorable occurrences; in particular, the slaughter of the kings of Canaan, related, Jdg 5:19. Here the narrative breaks off. It is resumed, Rev 19:19.

JFB: Rev 16:16 - -- Rather, "they (the three unclean spirits) gathered them together." If English Version be retained, "He" will refer to God who gives them over to the d...

Rather, "they (the three unclean spirits) gathered them together." If English Version be retained, "He" will refer to God who gives them over to the delusion of the three unclean spirits; or else the sixth angel (Rev 16:12).

JFB: Rev 16:16 - -- Hebrew, "Har," a mountain, and "Megiddo" in Manasseh in Galilee, the scene of the overthrow of the Canaanite kings by God's miraculous interposition u...

Hebrew, "Har," a mountain, and "Megiddo" in Manasseh in Galilee, the scene of the overthrow of the Canaanite kings by God's miraculous interposition under Deborah and Barak; the same as the great plain of Esdraelon. Josiah, too, as the ally of Babylon, was defeated and slain at Megiddo; and the mourning of the Jews at the time just before God shall interpose for them against all the nations confederate against Jerusalem, is compared to the mourning for Josiah at Megiddo. Megiddo comes from a root, gadad, "cut off," and means slaughter. Compare Joe 3:2, Joe 3:12, Joe 3:14, where "the valley of Jehoshaphat" (meaning in Hebrew, "judgment of God") is mentioned as the scene of God's final vengeance on the God-opposing foe. Probably some great plain, antitypical to the valleys of Megiddo and Jehoshaphat, will be the scene.

Clarke: Rev 16:16 - -- Armageddon - The original of this word has been variously formed, and variously translated. It is הר־מגדון har -megiddon , "the mount of th...

Armageddon - The original of this word has been variously formed, and variously translated. It is הר־מגדון har -megiddon , "the mount of the assembly;"or חרמה גדהון chormah gedehon , "the destruction of their army;"or it is הר־מגדו har -megiddo , "Mount Megiddo,"the valley of which was remarkable for two great slaughters: one of the Israelites, 2Ki 23:29, the other of the Canaanites, Jdg 4:16; Jdg 5:19. But Mount Megiddo, that is Carmel, is the place, according to some, where these armies should be collected

But what is the battle of Armageddon? How ridiculous have been the conjectures of men relative to this point! Within the last twenty years this battle has been fought at various places, according to our purblind seers and self-inspired prophets! At one time it was Austerlitz, at another Moscow, at another Leipsic, and now Waterloo! And thus they have gone on, and will go on, confounding and being confounded.

Defender: Rev 16:16 - -- "Armageddon" is, more precisely, "Har-Megiddo," or "Mount of Megiddo." Megiddo itself is a small and very ancient town about sixty miles north of Jeru...

"Armageddon" is, more precisely, "Har-Megiddo," or "Mount of Megiddo." Megiddo itself is a small and very ancient town about sixty miles north of Jerusalem, overlooking the plain of Megiddo on the west and the plain of Esdraelon (or valley of Jezreel) on the northeast. This vast plains area is the obvious location for large armies to bivouac in preparation for an attack on Jerusalem. However, by the time all the armies arrive there, even this large plain will not be able to contain them all. Many must be deployed down the Jordan valley and the valley of Jehoshaphat (near Jerusalem), down past the Dead Sea into Idumea and even beyond Bozrah (see notes on Rev 14:20). They will come from all over the world by any means of transportation they can obtain. With the world's resources already severely depleted by the plagues and the oil probably in short supply in most nations, many will have to commandeer horses or camels or donkeys. But come they will, in multitudes."

TSK: Rev 16:16 - -- he : Rev 17:14, Rev 19:17-21; Jdg 4:7; Joe 3:9-14; Zec 14:2, Zec 14:3 the Hebrew : Rev 9:11; Joh 5:2, Joh 19:13, Joh 19:17; Act 26:14 Armageddon : Jdg...

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Rev 16:16 - -- And he gathered them together - Who gathered them? Prof. Stuart renders it "they gathered them together,"supposing that it refers to the "spiri...

And he gathered them together - Who gathered them? Prof. Stuart renders it "they gathered them together,"supposing that it refers to the "spirits"- πνέυματα pneumata - in Rev 16:13, and that this is the construction of the neuter plural with a singular verb. So DeWette understands it. Hengstenberg supposes that it means that God gathered them together; others suppose that it was the sixth angel; others that it was Satan; others that it was the beast; and others that it was Christ. See Poole’ s Synopsis, in loco. The authority of DeWette and Prof. Stuart is sufficient to show that the construction which they adopt is authorized by the Greek, as indeed no one can doubt, and perhaps this accords better with the context than any other construction proposed. Thus, in Rev 16:14, the spirits are represented as going forth into the whole world for the purpose of gathering the nations together to the great battle, and it is natural to suppose that the reference is to them here as having accomplished what they went forth to do. But who are to be gathered together? Evidently those who, in Rev 16:14, are described by the word "them"- the "kings of the earth, and the whole world"; that is, there will be a state of things which would be well described by a universal gathering of forces in a central battlefield. It is by no means necessary to suppose that what is here represented will literally occur. There will be a mustering of spiritual forces; there will be a combination and a unity of opposition against the truth; there will be a rallying of the declining powers of paganism, Mohammedanism, and Romanism, as if the forces of the earth, marshalled by kings and rulers, were assembled in some great battlefield, where the destiny of the world was to be decided.

Into a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon - The word "Armageddon"- Ἀρμαγεδδών Armageddōn - occurs nowhere else in the New Testament, and is not found in the Septuagint. It seems to be formed from the Hebrew הר מגדּו har Me gidow Har Megiddo - Mountain of Megiddo. Compare 2Ch 35:22, where it is said that Josiah "came to fight in the valley of Megiddo."Megiddo was a town belonging to Manasseh, although within the limits of Issachar, Jos 17:11. It had been originally one of the royal cities of the Canaanites Jos 12:21, and was one of those of which the Israelites were unable for a long time to take possession. It was rebuilt and fortified by Solomon 1Ki 9:15, and thither Ahaziah king of Judah fled when wounded by Jehu, and died there, 2Ki 9:27. It was here that Deborah and Barak destroyed Sisera and his host Jdg 5:19; and it was in a battle near this that Josiah was slain by Pharaoh-Necho, 2Ki 23:29-30; 2Ch 35:20-25.

From the great mourning held for his loss, it became proverbial to speak of any grievous mourning as being "like the mourning of Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddon,"Zec 12:11. It has not been found easy to identify the place, but recent searches have made it probable that the vale or plain of Megiddo comprehended, if it was not wholly composed of, the prolongation of the plain of Esdraelon, toward Mount Carmel; that the city of Megiddo was situated there; and that the waters of Megiddo, mentioned in Jdg 5:19, are identical with the stream Kishon in that part of its course. See Biblical Repository, vol. 1, pp. 602, 603. It is supposed that the modern town called Lejjun occupies the site of the ancient Megiddo (Robinson’ s Biblical Researches , vol. 3, pp. 177-180). Megiddo was distinguished for being the place of the decisive conflict between Deborah and Sisera, and of the battle in which Josiah was slain by the Egyptian invaders; and hence it became emblematic of any decisive battlefield - just as Marathon, Leuctra, Arbela, or Waterloo is.

The word "mountain,"in the term Armageddon - "Mountain of Megiddo"- seems to have been used because Megiddo was in a mountainous region, though the battles were fought in a valley adjacent. The meaning here is, that there would be, as it were, a decisive battle which would determine the question of the prevalence of true religion on the earth. What we are to expect as the fulfillment of this would seem to be, that there will be some mustering of strength - some rallying of forces"- some opposition made to the kingdom of God in the gospel, by the powers here referred to, which would be decisive in its character, and which would be well represented by the battles between the people of God and their foes in the conflicts in the valley of Megiddo.

As this constitutes, according to the course of the exposition by which we have been conducted, an important division in the Book of Revelation, it may be proper to pause here and make a few remarks. The previous parts of the book, according to the interpretation proposed, relate to the past, and thus far we have found such a correspondence between the predictions and facts which have occurred as to lead us to suppose that these predictions have been fulfilled. At this point, I suppose, we enter on that part which remains yet to be fulfilled, and the investigation must carry us into the dark and unknown future. The remaining portion comprises a very general sketch of things down to the end of time, as the previous portion has touched on the great events pertaining to the church and its progress for a period of more than one thousand eight hundred years. A few general remarks, therefore, seem not inappropriate at this point:

(a) In the previous interpretations, we have had the facts of history by which to test the accuracy of the interpretation. The plan pursued has been, first, to investigate the meaning of the words and symbols, entirely independent of any supposed application, and then to inquire whether there have been any facts that may be regarded as corresponding with the meaning of the words and symbols as explained. Of this method of testing the accuracy of the exposition, we must now take our leave. Our sole reliance must be in the exposition itself, and our work must be limited to that.

(b) It is always difficult to interpret a prophecy. The language of prophecy is often apparently enigmatical; the symbols are sometimes obscure; and prophecies relating to the same subject are often in detached fragments, uttered by different perseus at different times; and it is necessary to collect and arrange them, in order to have a full view of the one subject. Thus the prophecies respecting the Messiah were many of them obscure, and indeed apparently contradictory, before he came; they were uttered at distant intervals, and by different prophets; at one time one trait of his character was dwelt upon, and at another another; and it was difficult to combine these so as to have an accurate view of what he would be, until he came. The result has shown what the meaning of the prophecies was; and at the same time has demonstrated that there was entire consistency in the various predictions, and that to one who could have comprehended all, it would have been possible to combine them so as to have had a correct view of the Messiah, and of his work, even before he came. The same remark is still more applicable to the predictions in the Book of Revelation, or to the similar predictions in the book of Daniel, and to many portions of Isaiah. It is easy to see how difficult it would have been, or rather how impossible by any human powers, to have applied these prophecies in detail before the events occurred; and yet, now that they have occurred, it may be seen that the symbols were the happiest that could have been chosen, and the only ones that could with propriety have been selected to describe the remarkable events which were to take place in future times.

© The same thing we may presume to be the case in regard to events which are to occur. We may expect to find:

(1)\caps1     l\caps0 anguage and symbols that are, in themselves, capable of clear interpretation as to their proper meaning;

(2)\caps1     t\caps0 he events of the future so sketched out by that language, and by those symbols, that we may obtain a general view that will be accurate; and yet.

(3)\caps1     a\caps0 n entire impossibility of filling up beforehand the minute details.

In regard, then, to the application of the particular portion now before us, Rev 16:12-16, the following remarks may be made:

(1) The Turkish power, especially since its conquest of Constantinople under Muhammed II. in 1453, and its establishment in Europe, has been a grand hindrance to the spread of the gospel. It has occupied a central position; it has possessed some of the richest parts of the world; it has, in general, excluded all efforts to spread the pure gospel within its limits; and its whole influence has been opposed to the spread of pure Christianity. Compare the notes on Rev 9:14-21. "By its laws it was death to a Mussulman to apostatize from his faith, and become a Christian; and examples, not a few, have occurred in recent times to illustrate it."It was not until quite recently, and that under the influence of missionaries in Constantinople, that evangelical Christianity has been tolerated in the Turkish dominions.

\caps1 (2) t\caps0 he prophecy before us implies that there would be a decline of that formidable power - represented by the "drying up of the great river Euphrates."See the notes on Rev 16:12. And no one can be insensible to the fact that events are occurring which would be properly represented by such a symbol; or that there is, in fact, now such a decline of that Turkish power, and that the beginning of that decline closely followed, in regard to time, if not in regard to the cause, the events which it is supposed were designated by the previous vials - those connected with the successive blows on the papacy and the seat of the beast. In reference, then, to the decline of that power, we may refer to the following things:

(a) The first great cause was internal revolt and insurrection. In 1820 Ali Pasha asserted his independence, and by his revolt precipitated the Greek insurrection which had been a long time secretly preparing - an insurrection so disastrous to the Turkish power.

(b) The Greek insurrection followed. This soon spread to the Aegean isles, and to the districts of Northern Greece, Epirus, and Thessaly; while at the same time the standard of revolt was raised in Wallachia and Moldavia. The progress and issue of that insurrection are well known. A Turcoman army of 30,000 that entered the Morea to reconquer it was destroyed in 1823 in detail, and the freedom of the peninsula was nearly completed by the insurgents. By sea the Greeks emulated their ancestors of Salamis and Mycale; and, attended with almost uniform success, encountered and vanquished the superior Turkish and Egyptian fleets. Meanwhile the sympathies of Western Christendom were awakened in behalf of their brother Christians struggling for independence; and just when the tide of success began to turn, and the Morea was again nearly subjected by Ibrahim Pasha, the united fleets of England, France, and Russia (in contravention of all their usual principles of policy) interposed in their favor; attacked and destroyed the Turco-Egyptian fleets in the battle of Navarino (September, 1827), and thus secured the independence of Greece. Nothing had ever occurred that tended so much to weaken the power of the Turkish empire.

© The rebellion of the great Egyptian pasha, Mehemet Ali, soon followed. The French invasion of Egypt had prepared him for it, by having taught him the superiority of European discipline, and thus this event was one of the proper results of those described under the first four vials. Mehemet Ali, through Ibrahim, attacked and conquered Syria; defeated the sultan’ s armies sent against him in the great battles of Hems, of Nezib, and of Iconium; and, but for the intervention of the European powers of England, Russia, Prussia, and Austria, by which he was driven out of Syria, and forced hack to his proper pashalic, Egypt, he would probably have advanced to Constantinople and subdued it.

(d) There has been for centuries a gradual weakening of the Turkish power. It has done nothing to extend its empire by arms. It has been resting in inglorious ease, and, in the meantime, its wealth and its strength have been gradually decreasing. It has lost Moldavia, Wallachia, Greece, Algiers, and, practically, Egypt; and is doing nothing to recruit its wasted and exhausted strength. Russia only waits for a favorable opportunity to strike the last blow on that enfeebled power, and to put an end to it forever.

(e) The general condition of the Turkish empire is thus described by Mr. Walsh, chaplain to the British ambassador to Constantinople: "The circumstances most striking to a traveler passing through Turkey is its depopulation. Ruins where villages had been built, and fallows where land had been cultivated, are frequently seen with no living thing near them. This effect is not so visible in larger towns, though the cause is known to operate there in a still greater degree. Within the last twenty years, Constantinople has lost more than half its population. Two conflagrations happened while I was in Constantinople, and destroyed fifteen thousand houses. The Russian and Greek wars were a constant drain on the janizaries of the capital; the silent operation of the plague is continually active, though not always alarming; it will be no exaggeration to say that, within the period mentioned, from three to four hundred thousand persons have been swept away in one city in Europe by causes which were not operating in any other - "conflagration, pestilence, and civil commotion."

The Turks, though naturally of a robust and vigorous constitution, addict themselves to such habits as are very unfavorable to population - the births do little more than exceed the ordinary deaths, and cannot supply the waste of casualties. The surrounding country is, therefore, continually drained to supply this waste in the capital, which, nevertheless, exhibits districts nearly depopulated. We see every day life going out in the fairest portion of Europe; and the human race threatened with extinction in a soil and climate capable of supporting the most abundant population"(Walsh’ s Narrative, pp. 22-26, as quoted in Bush on the Millennium, 243, 244). The probability now is, that this gradual decay will be continued; that the Turkish power will more and more diminish; that one portion after another will set up for independence; and that, by a gradual process of decline, this power will become practically extinct, and what is here symbolized by the "drying up of the great river Euphrates"will have been accomplished.

\caps1 (3) t\caps0 his obstacle removed, we may look for a general turning of the princes, and rulers, and people of the Eastern world to Christianity, represented Rev 16:12 by its being said that "the way of the kings of the East might be prepared."See the notes on that verse. It is clear that nothing would be more likely to contribute to this, or to prepare the way for it, than the removal of that Turcoman dominion which for more than four hundred years has been an effectual barrier to the diffusion of the gospel in the lands where it has prevailed. How rapidly, we may suppose, the gospel would spread in the East, if all the obstacles thrown in its way by the Turkish power were at once removed!

\caps1 (4) i\caps0 n accordance with the interpretation suggested on Rev 16:13-14, we may look for something that would be well represented by a combined effort on the part of paganism, Mohammedanism, and Romanism, to stay the progress and prevent the spread of evangelical religion. That is, according to the fair interpretation of the passage, we should look for some simultaneous movement as if their influence was to be about to cease, and as if it were necessary to arouse all their energies for a last and desperate struggle. It may be added that, in itself, nothing would be more probable than this; but when it will occur, and what form the aroused enemy will assume, it would be vain to conjecture.

\caps1 (5) a\caps0 nd in accordance with the interpretation suggested on Rev 16:15, we are to suppose that something will occur which would be well represented by the decisive conflicts in the valley of Megiddo; that is, something that will determine the ascendency of true religion in the world, as if these great powers of paganism, Mohammedanism, and Romanism should stake all their interests on the issue of a single battle. It is not necessary to suppose that this will literally occur, and there are no certain intimations as to the time when what is represented will happen; but all that is meant may be, that events will take place which would be well represented by such a conflict. Still, nothing in the prophecy prevents the supposition that these combined powers may be overthrown in some fierce conflict with Christian powers.

Poole: Rev 16:16 - -- Either the devil brought them together, or God by his providence ordered that they should be gathered together, into the place where God designed to...

Either the devil brought them together, or God by his providence ordered that they should be gathered together, into the place where God designed to destroy them and their armies, for so the word

Armageddon signifieth, say some; but others make it to signify the mountain of the gospel, or the mountain of apples, or fruits; but the first etymology in this place seems best. The word doth not signify any particular place; but here is an allusion, as some think, to that Megiddo, mentioned Jud 5:19 , where Barak overcame Sisera with his great army, and where Josiah was slain, 2Ki 23:30 . Of the issue of this last battle with the enemies of the church of Christ we shall read more, Rev 19:1-21 .

Haydock: Rev 16:16 - -- Armagedon. That is, the hill of robbers. (Challoner)

Armagedon. That is, the hill of robbers. (Challoner)

Gill: Rev 16:16 - -- And he gathered them together,.... Or rather "they gathered them together", as the Syriac version renders it; for though the verb is singular, a noun ...

And he gathered them together,.... Or rather "they gathered them together", as the Syriac version renders it; for though the verb is singular, a noun plural goes before it, as in Rev 16:14 and the same spirits that are there said to go forth, to gather the kings gether, these will gather them together; will persuade the Papal, Pagan, and Mahometan powers, the remains of them in the several parts of the world, to join together, and make one effort for the reviving of their declining, and almost ruined interests: for which purpose they will be brought together,

into a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon; which may be the same with Har-megiddo, the mountain of Megiddo; for the Hebrew word הר is read "Ar" by the Greeks; so the city Argarize is interpreted the mountain of the most High d: and this refers either to the slaying of Josiah in the valley of Megiddo, which occasioned such mourning, that it became proverbial for any great sorrow; see 2Ch 35:22 where it is called the valley of Megiddon; or rather to the slaughter of Sisera's army at the waters of Megiddo, by Barak, Jdg 5:19 suggesting that the same would be the fate of these united powers. Some derive the word from גדהון and חרמא, which signify "the destruction of their troops", or "armies"; and so designs not any place, that has been or is, but which will be so called from the issue of this battle; and since it is an Hebrew name that will be given it, it may lead us to conclude it will be somewhere in Judea, and very likely no other than the valley of Jehoshaphat, where all nations will be gathered; and which is called the valley of decision, where will be the day of the Lord, and multitudes will be slain, Joe 3:2 though the name will suit any place where there will be a defeat of these enemies; but this vial only brings them together; the utter destruction of them is reserved for the next.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Rev 16:16 Or “Harmagedon” (a literal transliteration of the Greek), or “Har-Magedon” (NASB), meaning “the Mount of Magedon” ...

Geneva Bible: Rev 16:16 ( 19 ) And he gathered them together into a place called in the Hebrew tongue ( 20 ) Armageddon. ( 19 ) Namely the angel, who according to the comman...

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Rev 16:1-21 - --1 The angels pour out their vials of wrath.6 The plagues that follow.15 Christ comes as a thief. Blessed are they that watch.

MHCC: Rev 16:12-16 - --This probably shows the destruction of the Turkish power, and of idolatry, and that a way will be made for the return of the Jews. Or, take it for Rom...

Matthew Henry: Rev 16:12-16 - -- The sixth angel poured out his vial; and observe, I. Where it fell - upon the great river Euphrates. Some take it literally, for the place where...

Barclay: Rev 16:13-16 - --These four verses are full of problems which must be solved if their meaning is to become reasonably clear. Three unclean spirits, like frogs, came ...

Barclay: Rev 16:13-16 - --Our next problem is to identify the false prophet. The dragon is identified as Satan (Rev 12:3, Rev 12:9). The beast, the Roman Empire with its Ca...

Barclay: Rev 16:13-16 - --We have still another problem to solve in this passage. The evil spirits went out and stirred up the kings of all the earth to bring them to battle. ...

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 16:1-21 - --J. The seven bowl judgments ch. 16 John revealed the outpouring of the bowls to enable his readers to un...

Constable: Rev 16:12-16 - --8. The sixth bowl 16:12-16 The final three bowl judgments all have political consequences. 16:12 The problem that this judgment poses for earth-dwelle...

College: Rev 16:1-21 - -- REVELATION 16 1 Then I heard a loud voice from the temple saying to the seven angels, "Go, pour out the seven bowls of God's wrath on the earth." ...

expand all
Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Rev 16:16 Ezekiel 39, written over 2,500 years ago, speaks of God’s judgment upon the enemies of Israel. Eze 39:12-15 describe what will happen after what m...

expand all
Introduction / Outline

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

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

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

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

TSK: Revelation 16 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Rev 16:1, The angels pour out their vials of wrath; Rev 16:6, The plagues that follow; Rev 16:15, Christ comes as a thief. Blessed are t...

Poole: Revelation 16 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 16

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

MHCC: Revelation 16 (Chapter Introduction) (Rev 16:1-7) The first vial is poured out on the earth, the second on the sea, the third on the rivers and fountains. (Rev 16:8-11) The fourth on the...

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

Matthew Henry: Revelation 16 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have an account of the pouring forth of these vials that were filled with the wrath of God. They were poured out upon the whole ...

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

Barclay: Revelation 16 (Chapter Introduction) The Seven Bowls Of The Wrath Of God (Rev_16:1-21) It will be better to read through the whole chapter before we study it in detail, 16:1-21 1 And I ...

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

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

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

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

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

Gill: Revelation 16 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO REVELATION 16 This chapter gives an account of the pouring out of the seven vials by the angels; their orders for it are in Rev 16:...

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

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

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #03: Try using operators (AND, OR, NOT, ALL, ANY) to refine your search. [ALL]
created in 0.69 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA