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Text -- Revelation 20:11-15 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Rev 20:11 - -- A great white throne ( thronon megan leukon ).
Here megan (great) is added to the throne pictures in Rev 4:4; Rev 20:4. The scene is prepared for t...
A great white throne (
Here
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Robertson: Rev 20:11 - -- From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away ( hou apo prosōpou ephugen hē ge kai ho ouranos ).
Second aorist (prophetic) active of pheugo...
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Robertson: Rev 20:11 - -- Was found ( heurethē ).
First aorist passive indicative of heuriskō . All is now spiritual. Even scientists today are speaking of the non-eternit...
Was found (
First aorist passive indicative of
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Robertson: Rev 20:12 - -- The dead, the great and the small ( tous nekrous tous megalous kai tous mikrous ).
The general resurrection of Rev 20:13 is pictured by anticipation ...
The dead, the great and the small (
The general resurrection of Rev 20:13 is pictured by anticipation as already over. No living are mentioned after the battle of Rev 20:7-10, though some will be living when Jesus comes to judge the quick and the dead (2Ti 4:1; 1Th 4:13.). All classes and conditions (Rev 11:18; Rev 13:16; Rev 19:5, Rev 19:18) John saw "standing before the throne"(
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Robertson: Rev 20:12 - -- Books were opened ( biblia ēnoichthēsan ).
First aorist passive of anoigō . Like Dan 7:10. The record of each human being has been kept in God&...
Books were opened (
First aorist passive of
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Robertson: Rev 20:12 - -- Were judged ( ekrithēsan ).
First aorist passive indicative of krinō . The sentence upon each rests upon written evidence.
Were judged (
First aorist passive indicative of
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Robertson: Rev 20:12 - -- Another book which is the book of life ( allo biblion ho estin tēs zōēs ).
This book has already been mentioned (Rev 3:5; Rev 13:8; Rev 17:8). ...
Another book which is the book of life (
This book has already been mentioned (Rev 3:5; Rev 13:8; Rev 17:8). "It is the roll of living citizens of Jerusalem"(Swete), "the church of the first born enrolled in heaven"(Heb 12:23). The books are "the vouchers for the book of life"(Alford). We are saved by grace, but character at last (according to their works) is the test as the fruit of the tree (Mat 7:16, Mat 7:20; Mat 10:32.; 25:31-46; Joh 15:6; 2Co 5:10; Rom 2:10; Rev 2:23; Rev 20:12; Rev 22:12).
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Robertson: Rev 20:13 - -- Gave up ( edōken ).
Just "gave"(first aorist active indicative of didōmi ), but for the sea to give is to give up (effective aorist). Sea as wel...
Gave up (
Just "gave"(first aorist active indicative of
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Robertson: Rev 20:13 - -- Death and Hades ( ho thanatos kai ho hāidēs ).
"An inseparable pair"(Swete) as in Rev 1:18; Rev 6:8; Rev 20:14. So in Mat 16:18 "the gates of Had...
Death and Hades (
"An inseparable pair"(Swete) as in Rev 1:18; Rev 6:8; Rev 20:14. So in Mat 16:18 "the gates of Hades"means the power of death. Etymologically Hades is the unseen world where all who die are as opposed to this visible world, but in actual use Hades is sometimes treated as the abode of the unrighteous (Luk 16:23). Charles thinks that this is true here, though there is nothing to show it apart from the personification of death and Hades and the casting of both into the lake of fire in Rev 20:14. Here again "each man"(
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Robertson: Rev 20:14 - -- Were cast ( eblēthēsan ).
As the devil (Rev 20:10) followed the two beasts (Rev 19:20) into the same dread lake of fire. Death is personified and...
Were cast (
As the devil (Rev 20:10) followed the two beasts (Rev 19:20) into the same dread lake of fire. Death is personified and is disposed of, "the last enemy"(1Co 15:26) and Paul sings the paean of victory over death (1Co 15:54., from Hos 13:14). Hades has no more terrors, for the saints are in heaven. There is no more fear of death (Heb 2:15), for death is no more (Rev 21:4). The second death (Rev 2:11; Rev 20:6; Rev 21:8) is here identified as in Rev 21:8 with the lake of fire.
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Robertson: Rev 20:15 - -- @@If any was not found written in the book of life (ei tis ouch heurethē en tēi biblōi tēs zōēs ). Condition of first class with ei an...
@@If any was not found written in the book of life (
Before God
Read
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Vincent: Rev 20:13 - -- The sea
As commonly understood, the sea means the literal sea, and the passage signifies that the dead contained in it shall rise. So Alford. Oth...
The sea
As commonly understood, the sea means the literal sea, and the passage signifies that the dead contained in it shall rise. So Alford. Other interpreters, however, say that it cannot mean the literal sea. Thus Milligan argues that the symbols of the Apocalypse must always be interpreted in the same way. " Symbols," he says, " are a form of speech, and therefore subject to the rules that regulate the interpretation of all speech... The power of that convention which links a certain sense to a certain sound in ordinary terms, is not less binding in the presence than in the absence of metaphor of any kind whatever. Thus when we read in the Apocalypse of 'the sea' as an emblem of the troubled and sinful nations of the earth, we are bound, unless forbidden by the context, to carry that interpretation through, and to understand the sea of the troubled and sinful world ."
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This is the second death
Add even the lake of fire .
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And whosoever (
Lit., if any . So Rev.
A representation of that great day of the Lord.
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Wesley: Rev 20:11 - -- How great, who can say? White with the glory of God, of him that sat upon it, - Jesus Christ. The apostle does not attempt to describe him here; only ...
How great, who can say? White with the glory of God, of him that sat upon it, - Jesus Christ. The apostle does not attempt to describe him here; only adds that circumstance, far above all description, From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away - Probably both the aerial and the starry heaven; which "shall pass away with a great noise." And there was found no place for them - But they were wholly dissolved, the very "elements melting with fervent heat." It is not said, they were thrown into great commotions, but they fled entirely away; not, they started from their foundations, but they " fell into dissolution;" not, they removed to a distant place, but there was found no place for them; they ceased to exist; they were no more. And all this, not at the strict command of the Lord Jesus; not at his awful presence, or before his fiery indignation; but at the bare presence of his Majesty, sitting with severe but adorable dignity on his throne.
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Wesley: Rev 20:12 - -- Of every age and condition. This includes, also, those who undergo a change equivalent to death, 1Co 15:51.
Of every age and condition. This includes, also, those who undergo a change equivalent to death, 1Co 15:51.
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Wesley: Rev 20:12 - -- Human judges have their books written with pen and ink: how different is the nature of these books! Were opened - O how many hidden things will then c...
Human judges have their books written with pen and ink: how different is the nature of these books! Were opened - O how many hidden things will then come to light; and how many will have quite another appearance than they had before in the sight of men! With the book of God's omniscience, that of conscience will then exactly tally. The book of natural law, as well as of revealed, will then also be displayed. It is not said, The books will be read: the light of that day will make them visible to all. Then, particularly, shall every man know himself, and that with the last exactness This will be the first true, full, impartial, universal history.
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Wesley: Rev 20:12 - -- Wherein are enrolled all that are accepted through the Beloved; all who lived and died in the faith that worketh by love. Which is the book of life, w...
Wherein are enrolled all that are accepted through the Beloved; all who lived and died in the faith that worketh by love. Which is the book of life, was opened - What manner of expectation will then be, with regard to the issue of the whole! Mal 3:16, &c.
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Wesley: Rev 20:13 - -- Death gave up all the bodies of men; and hades, the receptacle of separate souls, gave them up, to be re - united to their bodies.
Death gave up all the bodies of men; and hades, the receptacle of separate souls, gave them up, to be re - united to their bodies.
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Wesley: Rev 20:14 - -- That is, were abolished for ever; for neither the righteous nor the wicked were to die any more: their souls and bodies were no more to be separated. ...
That is, were abolished for ever; for neither the righteous nor the wicked were to die any more: their souls and bodies were no more to be separated. Consequently, neither death nor hades could any more have a being.
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JFB: Rev 20:11 - -- The Father [ALFORD]. Rather, the Son, to whom "the Father hath committed all judgment." God in Christ, that is, the Father represented by the Son, is ...
The Father [ALFORD]. Rather, the Son, to whom "the Father hath committed all judgment." God in Christ, that is, the Father represented by the Son, is He before whose judgment-seat we must all stand. The Son's mediatorial reign is with a view to prepare the kingdom for the Father's acceptance. When He has done that, He shall give it up to the Father, "that God may be all in all," coming into direct communion with His creatures, without intervention of a Mediator, for the first time since the fall. Heretofore Christ's Prophetical mediation had been prominent in His earthly ministry, His Priestly mediation is prominent now in heaven between His first and second advents, and His Kingly shall be so during the millennium and at the general judgment.
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JFB: Rev 20:11 - -- The final conflagration, therefore, precedes the general judgment. This is followed by the new heaven and earth (Rev. 21:1-27).
The final conflagration, therefore, precedes the general judgment. This is followed by the new heaven and earth (Rev. 21:1-27).
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JFB: Rev 20:12 - -- "the rest of the dead" who did not share the first resurrection, and those who died during the millennium.
"the rest of the dead" who did not share the first resurrection, and those who died during the millennium.
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JFB: Rev 20:12 - -- B has "the small and the great." A, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS have "the great and the small." The wicked who had died from the time of Adam to Chri...
B has "the small and the great." A, Vulgate, Syriac, and ANDREAS have "the great and the small." The wicked who had died from the time of Adam to Christ's second advent, and all the righteous and wicked who had died during and after the millennium, shall then have their eternal portion assigned to them. The godly who were transfigured and reigned with Christ during it, shall also be present, not indeed to have their portion assigned as if for the first time (for that shall have been fixed long before, Joh 5:24), but to have it confirmed for ever, and that God's righteousness may be vindicated in the case of both the saved and the lost, in the presence of an assembled universe. Compare "We must ALL appear," &c. Rom 14:10; 2Co 5:10. The saints having been first pronounced just themselves by Christ out of "the book of life," shall sit as assessors of the Judge. Compare Mat 25:31-32, Mat 25:40, "these My brethren." God's omniscience will not allow the most insignificant to escape unobserved, and His omnipotence will cause the mightiest to obey the summons. The living are not specially mentioned: as these all shall probably first (before the destruction of the ungodly, Rev 20:9) be transfigured, and caught up with the saints long previously transfigured; and though present for the confirmation of their justification by the Judge, shall not then first have their eternal state assigned to them, but shall sit as assessors with the Judge.
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JFB: Rev 20:12 - -- (Dan 7:10). The books of God's remembrance, alike of the evil and the good (Psa 56:8; Psa 139:4; Mal 3:16): conscience (Rom 2:15-16), the word of Chr...
(Dan 7:10). The books of God's remembrance, alike of the evil and the good (Psa 56:8; Psa 139:4; Mal 3:16): conscience (Rom 2:15-16), the word of Christ (Joh 12:48), the law (Gal 3:10), God's eternal counsel (Psa 139:16).
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JFB: Rev 20:12 - -- (Rev 3:5; Rev 13:8; Rev 21:27; Exo 32:32-33; Psa 69:28; Dan 12:1; Phi 4:3). Besides the general book recording the works of all, there is a special b...
(Rev 3:5; Rev 13:8; Rev 21:27; Exo 32:32-33; Psa 69:28; Dan 12:1; Phi 4:3). Besides the general book recording the works of all, there is a special book for believers in which their names are written, not for their works, but for the work of Christ for, and in, them. Therefore it is called, "the Lamb's book of life." Electing grace has singled them out from the general mass.
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JFB: Rev 20:12 - -- We are justified by faith, but judged according to (not by) our works. For the general judgment is primarily designed for the final vindication of God...
We are justified by faith, but judged according to (not by) our works. For the general judgment is primarily designed for the final vindication of God's righteousness before the whole world, which in this checkered dispensation of good and evil, though really ruling the world, has been for the time less manifest. Faith is appreciable by God and the believer alone (Rev 2:17). But works are appreciable by all. These, then, are made the evidential test to decide men's eternal state, thus showing that God's administration of judgment is altogether righteous.
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JFB: Rev 20:13 - -- Greek, "Hades." The essential identity of the dying and risen body is hereby shown; for the sea and grave give up their dead. The body that sinned or ...
Greek, "Hades." The essential identity of the dying and risen body is hereby shown; for the sea and grave give up their dead. The body that sinned or served God shall, in righteous retribution, be the body also that shall suffer or be rewarded. The "sea" may have a symbolical [CLUVER from AUGUSTINE], besides the literal meaning, as, in Rev 8:8; Rev 12:12; Rev 13:1; Rev 18:17, Rev 18:19; so "death" and "hell" are personifications (compare Rev 21:1). But the literal sense need hardly be departed from: all the different regions wherein the bodies and souls of men had been, gave them up.
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JFB: Rev 20:14 - -- Death and Hades, as personified representatives of the enemies of Christ' and His Church, are said to be cast into the lake of fire to express the tru...
Death and Hades, as personified representatives of the enemies of Christ' and His Church, are said to be cast into the lake of fire to express the truth that Christ and His people shall never more die, or be in the state of disembodied spirits.
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JFB: Rev 20:14 - -- "the lake of fire" is added in A, B, and ANDREAS. English Version, which omits the clause, rests on inferior manuscripts. In hell the ancient form of ...
"the lake of fire" is added in A, B, and ANDREAS. English Version, which omits the clause, rests on inferior manuscripts. In hell the ancient form of death, which was one of the enemies destroyed by Christ, shall not continue, but a death of a far different kind reigns there, "everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord": an abiding testimony of the victory of Christ.
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JFB: Rev 20:15 - -- The blissful lot of the righteous is not here specially mentioned as their bliss had commenced before the final judgment. Compare, however, Mat 25:34,...
A great white throne - Refulgent with glorious majesty
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Him that sat on it - The indescribable Jehovah
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Clarke: Rev 20:11 - -- From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away - Even the brightness of his countenance dissolved the universe, and annihilated the laws by whic...
From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away - Even the brightness of his countenance dissolved the universe, and annihilated the laws by which it was governed. This is a very majestic figure, and finely expressed
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Clarke: Rev 20:11 - -- There was found no place for them - The glorious majesty of God filling all things, and being all in all.
There was found no place for them - The glorious majesty of God filling all things, and being all in all.
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Clarke: Rev 20:12 - -- The dead, small and great - All ranks, degrees, and conditions of men. This description seems to refer to Dan 7:9, Dan 7:10
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Clarke: Rev 20:12 - -- And the books were opened - See Dan 12:1. "Rab. Jehuda said: All the actions of men, whether good or bad, are written in a book, and of all they sha...
And the books were opened - See Dan 12:1. "Rab. Jehuda said: All the actions of men, whether good or bad, are written in a book, and of all they shall give account."- Sohar Gen., fol. 79, col. 298. "How careful should men be to shun vice, and to act uprightly before the holy blessed God, seeing there are so many which go throughout the earth, see the works of men, testify of them, and write them in a book!"- Ibid., fol. 105, col. 417
"In the first day of the new year the holy blessed God sits that he may judge the world; and all men, without exception, give an account of themselves; and the books of the living and the dead are opened.
Sohar Chadash, fol. 19, 1
The books mentioned here were the books of the living and the dead, or the book of life and the book of death: that is, the account of the good and evil actions of men; the former leading to life, the latter to death. St. John evidently alludes here to Dan 7:10, on which the rabbinical account of the books appears to be founded. The expressions are figurative in both
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Clarke: Rev 20:12 - -- According to their works - And according to their faith also, for their works would be the proof whether their faith were true or false; but faith e...
According to their works - And according to their faith also, for their works would be the proof whether their faith were true or false; but faith exclusively could be no rule in such a procedure.
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Clarke: Rev 20:13 - -- The sea gave up the dead - Those who had been drowned in it, and those millions slain in naval contests, who had no other grave
The sea gave up the dead - Those who had been drowned in it, and those millions slain in naval contests, who had no other grave
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Clarke: Rev 20:13 - -- And death - All who died by any kind of disease. Death is here personified, and represented as a keeper of defunct human beings; probably no more th...
And death - All who died by any kind of disease. Death is here personified, and represented as a keeper of defunct human beings; probably no more than earth or the grave is meant, as properly belonging to the empire of death
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Clarke: Rev 20:13 - -- And hell - Ἁιδης, Hades, the place of separate spirits. The sea and death have the bodies of all human beings; hades has their spirits. That...
And hell -
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Clarke: Rev 20:14 - -- And death and hell were cast into the lake - Death himself is now abolished, and the place for separate spirits no longer needful. All dead bodies a...
And death and hell were cast into the lake - Death himself is now abolished, and the place for separate spirits no longer needful. All dead bodies and separated souls being rejoined, and no more separation of bodies and souls by death to take place, consequently the existence of these things is no farther necessary
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Clarke: Rev 20:14 - -- This is the second death - The first death consisted in the separation of the soul from the body for a season; the second death in the separation of...
This is the second death - The first death consisted in the separation of the soul from the body for a season; the second death in the separation of body and soul from God for ever. The first death is that from which there may be a resurrection; the second death is that from which there can be no recovery. By the first the body is destroyed during time; by the second, body and soul are destroyed through eternity.
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Clarke: Rev 20:15 - -- Written in the book of life - Only those who had continued faithful unto death were taken to heaven. All whose names were not found in the public re...
Written in the book of life - Only those who had continued faithful unto death were taken to heaven. All whose names were not found in the public registers, who either were not citizens, or whose names had been erased from those registers because of crimes against the state, could claim none of those emoluments or privileges which belong to the citizens; so those who either did not belong to the new and spiritual Jerusalem, or who had forfeited their rights and privileges by sin, and had died in that state, were cast into the lake of fire
This is the way in which God, at the day of judgment, will proceed with sinners and apostates. Reader, see that thy name be written in the sacred register; and, if written in, see that it never be blotted out.
Defender: Rev 20:11 - -- When the fire from heaven falls on the hosts of Gog and Magog, it will apparently burn up the earth and its atmospheric heaven as well, fulfilling the...
When the fire from heaven falls on the hosts of Gog and Magog, it will apparently burn up the earth and its atmospheric heaven as well, fulfilling the prophecy of 2Pe 3:10. It will purge from all the earth the age-long effects of God's curse (the fossil remains of billions of dead creatures that had perished in the great flood and other subsequent terrestrial catastrophes). In their place will appear God's awful throne of final judgment (Mat 24:35)."
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Defender: Rev 20:12 - -- The "dead" here are the unsaved dead, their bodies having been raised in the second resurrection in order to stand before God in judgment. Whether tho...
The "dead" here are the unsaved dead, their bodies having been raised in the second resurrection in order to stand before God in judgment. Whether those believers who are still living in the millennial earth at this time will also be raised - along with any believers who may have died during the thousand years - is not stated, but this would be a reasonable assumption since they also would have perished in the final holocaust if not before. In any case, their names would have been "written in the book of life," so they would not be judged with the others "according to their works."
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Defender: Rev 20:12 - -- When the dead are judged according to their works, they must all be sent to hell, for "there is none righteous, no, not one" and "by the deeds of the ...
When the dead are judged according to their works, they must all be sent to hell, for "there is none righteous, no, not one" and "by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight" (Rom 3:10, Rom 3:20). Since they have rejected or ignored God's infinite grace and Christ's infinite love in dying for their sins, "there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, But a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries" (Heb 10:26, Heb 10:27). Even though God is "not willing that any should perish," His justice demands it when they intractably have refused throughout their lives to "come to repentance" (2Pe 3:9) and to personal faith in Christ."
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Defender: Rev 20:13 - -- "Death" is often taken as synonymous with "the grave" (1Co 15:55), where dead bodies are confined, whereas "hell" (Greek Hades) is the place where the...
"Death" is often taken as synonymous with "the grave" (1Co 15:55), where dead bodies are confined, whereas "hell" (Greek
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Defender: Rev 20:14 - -- All who will have been confined in death and Hades will be cast into everlasting fire, along with the devil, his angels (Mat 25:41), who are already t...
All who will have been confined in death and Hades will be cast into everlasting fire, along with the devil, his angels (Mat 25:41), who are already there, the beast and the false prophet.
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Defender: Rev 20:14 - -- These will all have died physically, then been resurrected. They will die again physically (or possibly will continue in an eternal state of dying - M...
These will all have died physically, then been resurrected. They will die again physically (or possibly will continue in an eternal state of dying - Mar 9:43-48). This can appropriately be called "the second death.""
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Defender: Rev 20:15 - -- Assuming that the names of all who begin physical life are initially inscribed in the book of life, their retention there depends on whether they acce...
Assuming that the names of all who begin physical life are initially inscribed in the book of life, their retention there depends on whether they accept Christ as personal Savior after they become conscious and accountable sinners before they die. Otherwise their names will be blotted out of the book of life (see Rev 3:5, note; Rev 22:19, note).
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Defender: Rev 20:15 - -- The lake of fire is obviously not located on this present earth, for this present earth will have burned up and "fled away" (Rev 20:11) by this time; ...
The lake of fire is obviously not located on this present earth, for this present earth will have burned up and "fled away" (Rev 20:11) by this time; yet the lake of fire will have been burning continuously for more than a thousand years (Rev 19:20). Neither will it be on the new earth, for that will be the home of "the Lord God Almighty" (Rev 21:22), whereas "them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ ... shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power" (2Th 1:8, 2Th 1:9).
The word "destruction" does not mean annihilation, but "ruin." Thus, the unsaved will be moved far away from the presence of the Lord, and there they will remain forever. They may well be translated to a far distant dark star, for a star is itself a lake of fire, and the lost are said to be like "wandering stars, to whom is reserved the blackness of darkness for ever" (Jud 1:13). There they must continue in their sinful state, hating God, never resting, without light, without love, without peace, without anything that speaks of the presence or power of God, forever.
Lest anyone think this fate too severe, there are several factors to remember. In the first place, those who have rejected God's presence in their lives while they were on earth will be less miserable in hell than if they were forced to be in His presence in heaven forever. Secondly, only infinite punishment is fitting for those who have rejected or ignored the infinite love and infinite suffering of the Son of God for them. Finally, they must exist forever somewhere since they had been created in God's image which by definition is eternal."
TSK: Rev 20:11 - -- I saw : Rev 20:2, Rev 19:11; Gen 18:25; Psa 9:7, Psa 9:8, Psa 14:6, Psa 14:7, Psa 47:8, Psa 89:14, Psa 97:2; Mat 25:31; Act 17:30,Act 17:31; Rom 2:5
f...
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TSK: Rev 20:12 - -- I saw : Rev 20:11; Dan 12:2; Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29, Joh 11:25, Joh 11:26; Act 24:15; 1Co 15:21-23; 1Th 4:15-17
small : Rev 19:5
stand : Rom 14:10-12; 1Co...
I saw : Rev 20:11; Dan 12:2; Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29, Joh 11:25, Joh 11:26; Act 24:15; 1Co 15:21-23; 1Th 4:15-17
small : Rev 19:5
stand : Rom 14:10-12; 1Co 4:5; 2Co 5:10
the books : Dan 7:10
and another : Rev 3:5, Rev 13:8, Rev 17:8, Rev 21:27; Psa 69:28; Dan 12:1; Luk 10:20; Phi 4:3
according : Rev 20:13, Rev 2:23, Rev 22:12; Psa 28:4, Psa 62:12; Pro 24:12, Pro 24:29; Ecc 12:14; Jer 17:10; Jer 32:19; Mat 16:27; Rom 2:6; 2Co 5:10
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TSK: Rev 20:13 - -- the sea : Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29
and death : Rev 20:14, Rev 6:8; Hos 13:14; 1Co 15:50-58
hell : or, the grave, 1Co 15:55 *marg.
and they : Rev 20:12
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TSK: Rev 20:15 - -- whosoever : Mar 16:16; Joh 3:18, Joh 3:19, Joh 3:36, Joh 14:6; Act 4:12; Heb 2:3, Heb 12:25; 1Jo 5:11, 1Jo 5:12
was cast : Rev 19:20; Mat 25:41; Mar 9...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Rev 20:11 - -- And I saw a great white throne - This verse commences the description of the final judgment, which embraces the remainder of the chapter. The f...
And I saw a great white throne - This verse commences the description of the final judgment, which embraces the remainder of the chapter. The first thing seen in the vision is the burning throne of the Judge. The things that are specified in regard to it are, that it was "great,"and that it was "white."The former expression means that it was high or elevated. Compare Isa 6:1. The latter expression - white - means that it was "splendid or shining."Compare 1Ki 10:18-20. The throne here is the same which is referred to in Mat 25:31, and called there "the throne of his glory."
And him that sat on it - The reference here undoubtedly is to the Lord Jesus Christ, the final Judge of mankind (compare Mat 25:31), and the scene described is what will occur at his second advent.
From whose face - Or, from whose presence; though the word may be used here to denote more strictly his face - as illuminated, and shining like the sun. See Rev 1:16, "And his countenance was as the sun shineth in his strength."
The earth and the heaven fled away - That is, as the stars, at the rising of the sun, seem to flee to more remote regions, and vanish from human view, so when the Son of God shall descend in his glory to judge the world, the earth and all other worlds shall seem to vanish. Every one must admire the sublimity of this image; no one can contemplate it without being awed by the majesty and glory of the final Judge of mankind. Similar expressions, where the natural creation shrinks back with awe at the presence of God, frequently occur in the Bible. Compare Psa 18:7-15; Psa 77:16-19; Psa 114:3-5; Hab 3:6, Hab 3:10-11.
And there was found no place for them - They seemed to flee "entirely away,"as if there was "no"place where they could find a safe retreat, or which would receive and shelter them in their flight. The image expresses, in the most emphatic manner, the idea that they entirely disappeared, and no language could more sublimely represent the majesty of the Judge.
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Barnes: Rev 20:12 - -- And I saw the dead, small and great - All the dead - for this language would express that - the whole race being composed of the "small and gre...
And I saw the dead, small and great - All the dead - for this language would express that - the whole race being composed of the "small and great."Thus, in other language, the same idea might be expressed by saying, the young and old; the rich and poor; the bond and free; the sick and well; the happy and the unhappy; the righteous and the wicked; for all the human family might, in these respects, be considered as thus divided. The fair meaning in this place therefore is, that all the dead would be there, and of course this would preclude the idea of a "previous"resurrection of any part of the dead, as of the saints, at the beginning of the millennium. There is no intimation here that it is the wicked dead that are referred to in this description of the final judgment. It is the judgment of all the dead.
Stand before God - That is, they appear thus to be judged. The word "God"here must naturally refer to the final Judge on the throne, and there can be no doubt (see Mat 25:31) that this is the Lord Jesus. Compare 2Co 5:10. None can judge the secrets of the heart; none can pronounce on the moral character of all mankind, of all countries and ages, and determine their everlasting allotment, but he who is divine.
And the books were opened - That is, the books containing the record of human deeds. The representation is, that all that people have done is recorded, and that it will be exhibited on the final trial, and will constitute the basis of the last judgment. The imagery seems to be derived from the accusations made against such as are arraigned before human courts of justice.
And another book was opened, which is the book of life - The book containing the record of the names of all who shall enter into life, or into heaven. See the notes on Rev 3:5. The meaning here is, that John saw not only the general books opened containing the records of the deeds of people, but that he had a distinct view of the list or roll of those who were the followers of the Lamb. It would seem that in regard to the multitudes of the impenitent and the wicked, the judgment will proceed "on their deeds"in general; in regard to the righteous, it will turn on the fact that their names had been enrolled in the book of life. That will be sufficient to determine the nature of the sentence that is to be passed on them. He will be safe whose name is found in the book of life; no one will be safe who is to have his eternal destiny determined by his own deeds. This passage proves particularly that the righteous dead are referred to here as being present at the final judgment; and is thus an additional argument against the supposition of a resurrection of the righteous, and a judgment on them, at the beginning of the millennium.
And the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books - The records which had been made of their deeds. The final judgment will proceed on the record that has been made. It will not be arbitrary, and will not be determined by rank, condition, or profession, but it will be according to the record.
According to their works - See the notes on 2Co 5:10. The fact that the name of anyone was found in the book of life would seem, as above remarked, to determine the "certainty"of salvation; but the amount of reward would be in proportion to the service rendered to the Redeemer, and the attainments made in piety.
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Barnes: Rev 20:13 - -- And the sea gave up the dead which were in it - All that had been buried in the depths of ocean. This number in the aggregate will be great. If...
And the sea gave up the dead which were in it - All that had been buried in the depths of ocean. This number in the aggregate will be great. If we include all who were swept off by the flood, and all who have perished by shipwreck, and all who have been killed in naval battles and buried in the sea, and all who have been swept away by inundations of the ocean, and all who have peacefully died at sea, as sailors, or in the pursuits of commerce or benevolence, the number in the aggregate will be immense - a number so vast that it was proper to notice them particularly in the account of the general resurrection and the last judgment.
And death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them - That is, all the dead came, from all regions where they were scattered - on the land and in the ocean - in this world and in the invisible world. "Death and hell"are here personified, and are represented as having dominion over the dead, and as now "delivering"up, or "surrendering"those who were held tinder them. On the meaning of the words used here, see the notes on Rev 1:18; Rev 6:8. Compare the Mat 10:23 note; Job 10:21-22 notes; Isa 14:9 note. This whole representation is entirely inconsistent with the supposition that a large part of the dead had been already raised up at the beginning of the millennial period, and had been permitted, in their glorified bodies, to reign with Christ.
And they were judged, ... - All these were judged - the righteous and the wicked; those buried at sea, and those buried on the land; the small and the great; the dead, in whatever world they may have been.
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Barnes: Rev 20:14 - -- And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire - Death and Hades (hell) are here personified, as they are in the previous verse. The declar...
And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire - Death and Hades (hell) are here personified, as they are in the previous verse. The declaration is equivalent to the statement in 1Co 15:26; "The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death."See the notes on that passage. The idea is, that death, considered as the separation of soul and body, with all the attendant woes, will exist no more. The righteous will live forever, and the wicked will linger on in a state never to be terminated by death. The reign of Death and Hades, as such, would come to an end, and a new order of things would commence where this would be unknown. There might be what would be properly called death, but it would not be death in this form; the soul would live forever, but it would not be in that condition represented by the word
This is the second death - That is, this whole process here described - the condemnation, and the final death and ruin of those whose names are "not found written in the book of life"- properly constitutes the second death. This proves that when it is said that "death and hell were cast into the lake of fire,"it cannot be meant that all punishment will cease forever, and that all will be saved, for the writer goes on to describe what he calls "the second death"as still existing. See Rev 20:15. John describes this as the second death, not because it in all respects resembles the first death, but because it has so many points of resemblance that it may be properly called "death."Death, in any form, is the penalty of law; it is attended with pain; it cuts off from hope, from friends, from enjoyment; it subjects him who dies to a much-dreaded condition, and in all these respects it was proper to call the final condition of the wicked "death"- though it would still be true that the soul would live. There is no evidence that John meant to affirm that the second death would imply an extinction of "existence."Death never does that; the word does not naturally and properly convey that idea.
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Barnes: Rev 20:15 - -- And whosoever - All persons, of all ranks, ages, and conditions. No word could be more comprehensive than this. The single condition here state...
And whosoever - All persons, of all ranks, ages, and conditions. No word could be more comprehensive than this. The single condition here stated, as being what would save any from being cast into the lake of fire, is, that they are "found written in the book of life."All besides these, princes, kings, nobles, philosophers, statesmen, conquerors; rich men and poor men; the bond and the free; the young and the aged; the frivolous, the vain, the proud, and the sober; the modest and the humble, will be doomed to the lake of fire. Unlike in all other things, they will be alike in the only thing on which their eternal destiny will depend - that they have not so lived that their names have become recorded in the book of life. As they will also be destitute of true religion, there will be a propriety that they shall share the same doom in the future world.
Written in the book of life - See the notes on Rev 3:5.
Was cast into the lake of fire - See the notes on Mat 25:41. That is, they will be doomed to a punishment which will be well represented by their lingering in a sea of fire forever. This is the termination of the judgment - the winding up of the affairs of men. The vision of John here rests for a moment on the doom of the wicked, and then turns to a more full contemplation of the happy lot of the righteous, as detailed in the two closing chapters of the book.
Section e. - Condition of things referred to in Rev 20:11-15;
(1) There will be a general resurrection of the dead - of the righteous and the wicked. This is implied by the statement that the "dead, small and great,"were seen to stand before God; that "the sea gave up the dead which were in it"; that "Death and Hades gave up their dead."All were there whose names were or were not written in the book of life.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 here will be a solemn and impartial judgment. How long a time this will occupy is not said, and is not necessary to be known - for time is of no consequence where there is an eternity of devotion - but it is said that they will be all judged "according to their works"- that is, strictly according to their character. They will receive no arbitrary doom; they will have no sentence which will not be just. See Mat. 25:31-46.
\caps1 (3) t\caps0 his will be the "final"judgment. After this, the affairs of the race will be put on a different footing. This will be the end of the present arrangements; the end of the present dispensations; the end of human probation. The great question to be determined in regard to our world will have been settled; what the plan of redemption was intended to accomplish on the earth will have been accomplished; the agency of the Divine Spirit in converting sinners will have come to an end; and the means of grace, as such, will be employed no more. There is not here or elsewhere an intheation that beyond this period any of these things will exist, or that the work of redemption, as such, will extend into the world beyond the judgment. As there is no intheation that the condition of the righteous will be changed, so there is none that the condition of the wicked will be; as there is no hint that the righteous will ever be exposed to temptation, or to the danger of falling into sin, so there is none that the offers of salvation will ever again be made to the wicked. On the contrary, the whole representation is, that all beyond this will be fixed and unchangeable forever. See the notes on Rev 22:11.
\caps1 (4) t\caps0 he wicked will be destroyed, in what may be properly called the "second"death. As remarked in the notes, this does not mean that this death will in all respects resemble the first death, but there will be so many points of resemblance that it will be proper to call it "death."It does not mean that they will be "annihilated,"for "death"never implies that. The meaning is, that this will be a cutting off from what is properly called "life,"from hope, from happiness, and from peace, and a subjection to pain and agony, which it will be proper to call "death"- death in the most fearful form; death that will continue for ever. No statements in the Bible are more clear than those which are made on this point; no affirmation of the eternal punishment of the wicked "could be"more explicit than those which occur in the sacred Scriptures. See the Mat 25:46 note, and 2Th 1:9 note.
\caps1 (5) t\caps0 his will be the end of the woes and calamities produced in the kingdom of God by sin. The reign of Satan and of Death, so far as the Redeemer’ s kingdom is concerned, will be at an end and henceforward the church will be safe from all the arts and efforts of its foes. Religion will be triumphant, and the affairs of the universe be reduced to permanent order.
\caps1 (6) t\caps0 he preparation is thus made for the final triumph of the righteous - the state to which all things tend. The writer of this book has conducted the prospective history through all the times of persecution which awaited the church, and stated the principal forms of error which would prevail, and foretold the conflicts through which the church would pass, and described its eventful history to the millennial period, and to the final triumph of truth and righteousness; and now nothing remains to complete the plan of the work but to give a rapid sketch of the final condition of the redeemed. This is done in the two following chapters, and with this the work is ended.
Poole: Rev 20:11 - -- God now giveth his prophet a vision of the last day, the day of judgment. He seeth
a throne a place of judicature; said to be great, to denote ...
God now giveth his prophet a vision of the last day, the day of judgment. He seeth
a throne a place of judicature; said to be great, to denote its gloriousness;
white to signify Christ’ s purity and holiness in his judging the world. And he saw Christ sitting upon it, and all old things passing away. Peter thus describes this flying away of the earth and heavens; The heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works therein shall be burned up, 2Pe 3:10 . All these things shall be dissolved, 2Pe 3:11 .
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Poole: Rev 20:12 - -- The former verses gave us an account of Christ, the great Judge of the quick and the dead in the last day; the Lord Jesus Christ sat upon a throne o...
The former verses gave us an account of Christ, the great Judge of the quick and the dead in the last day; the Lord Jesus Christ sat upon a throne of glory, about to execute his last holy and righteous judgment. Now he describes the persons to be judged, viz. all, both
small and great
And the books were opened: to show the justice and righteousness according to which this Judge would proceed, books are said to be opened. What books? The book of God’ s law; the book of God’ s omniscience; the book of men’ s consciences. In the former is contained what all men should have done; the two latter will discover what they have thought, spake, or done in the flesh.
And another other book was opened, which is the book of life the book of life, mentioned Rev 3:5 , by which is to be understood the book of God’ s election, wherein are the names of all those who, being from eternity chosen to life, were redeemed with the blood of Christ, and afterwards effectually called, justified, and sanctified.
And the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works according to these books shall the last judgment be, Rom 2:16 , with respect had unto every one’ s work.
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Poole: Rev 20:13 - -- By hell is meant all places where the dead are; whosoever shall be at that day in the state of the dead; the bodies of men, whether buried in the e...
By hell is meant all places where the dead are; whosoever shall be at that day in the state of the dead; the bodies of men, whether buried in the earth or sea; and the souls of men, whether they be in the place of torments or happiness, shall all be re-united to their bodies, that they may both in soul and body receive their final doom of eternal happiness, or eternal misery, accordingly as they have lived in the world; and those who shall be alive at that day, who shall be changed, ( as the apostle speaks, 1Co 15:51 ), are to be counted dead in the sense of this text, their change being instead of death to them. It is not said they shall be judged for their works, (though that as to the wicked is true), but
according to their works which is true as to the elect, who though their names be written in the book of life, yet must work righteousness; and they shall have judgment of absolution, not according to the perfection, but the sincerity, of their works, done in obedience to the will of God.
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Poole: Rev 20:14 - -- And death and hell were cast into lake of fire there shall be no more natural death, nor any more separate state of souls, (so adhv signifies), they...
And death and hell were cast into lake of fire there shall be no more natural death, nor any more separate state of souls, (so
This as to the wicked of the earth, is the second death mentioned Rev 2:11 .
PBC: Rev 20:11 - -- Re 20:11 And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for ...
Re 20:11 And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them.
After John saw the casting of Satan into the lake of fire and brimstone, he then was shown the One who sits upon a great white throne. Such is His omnipotency that nothing else exists except His righteousness. This is what is commonly termed the Great White Throne Judgment. Let us examine this in the light of Holy Scripture.— Eld. Charles Taylor
The interpretation of Re 20:11-15 must harmonize with Mt 25:31-46, and Joh 5:28-29. Good works are used as an identifying mark for the elect. Not a word is mentioned regarding the sins of the sheep in Mt 25:1-46. And there is not a single good work attributed to the goats. The Lord Jesus Christ has made His children completely righteous by imputing His righteousness to them.
I do not believe those whose names are found written in the book of life are judged according to the things written in the books. But the wicked dead will most surely be judged according to their works of evil that are contained in the books. They will receive complete justice. Their punishment will be perfectly fitting for their sins. They will be cast into the lake of fire and be punished forever.
We should be eternally grateful that ever though "we were by nature the children of wrath, even as others," {Eph 2:3} we have been saved by God’s rich mercy and grace.
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PBC: Rev 20:12 - -- Jesus taught us concerning this occasion. " Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, ...
Jesus taught us concerning this occasion. " Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, and shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation."{Joh 5:28-29} These are all the dead, small and great. This is the general resurrection. This includes all who have died naturally. Jesus simply speaks of this as a division of those who have done good, and those who have done evil. So it seems these are the same as those in Re 20:12. We are not told what these books are which were first opened. Yet it seems they contained things which are termed as works. We are very much aware of the self-exalted human nature of man. He desires to be judged on works which he has done. So the books of the law are brought out for the examination of those dead in trespasses and sins. Self-exalted human nature can find no justification of its works when judged out of the books of the law.
." .. and another book was opened, which is the book of life."
Under the old Jewish jurisprudence this would have been the book of lineage. Under the Church Covenant this is called " The Lamb’s Book of Life." The book of Jewish family lineage could be altered, because names were written therein when children were born to a family. The Lamb’s Book of Life was written from the foundation of the world. Names cannot be taken from this book. They were given to Christ as His inheritance. Their names were not written there because of any good which they had done. Rather, they were written there based on the work which Christ did. They are His inheritance! Their works are imputed as good because of the work which Christ did for them. " Then said they unto him, What shall we do, that we might work the works of God? Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent."{Joh 6:28-29} The answer of Jesus is very simple as to the nature of this work. The ability to believe on Jesus Christ is the work of God. Heaven and immortal glory cannot be gained by any work which man is able to perform.
This White Throne Judgment was not set to judge individual sins! Rather, it was set to show the love of God showered down on undeserving man. These whose names were found in the Lamb’s Book of Life entered into the joys of their Lord.— Eld. Charles Taylor
It is my belief that the "dead, small and great" in Re 20:12 states, "there was found no place for them." Notice the language: "the books were opened:" {PLURAL BOOKS} I think these "books" are the books of the Law of God, which could be expanded to include all 66 Books of the Holy Scriptures, but particularly the Moral Law (Ten Commandments). The main point of the passage is that these DEAD were "judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works."
This statement ("another book was opened, which is the book of life") is supplied to explain Re 20:15: "And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire."
This BOOK (SINGULAR) is the Lamb’s Book of Life which is mentioned elsewhere in the Scriptures as follows: Da 12:1; Re 5:6-10; 13:7-9; 17:8
Our Lord Jesus Christ bore in His body on the cruel rugged Roman Cross ALL of the sins of ALL of those whose names WERE written in {the book of life of the Lamb} slain from the foundation of the world; therefore, there is NO eternal judgment for these elect, blood bought, Children of God, EXCEPT, for the King to say unto them on his right hand, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world." But for those whose names are NOT written in {the book of life of the Lamb} slain from the foundation of the world, the SAME King will say unto them on His left hand, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels." The Lord Jesus died for ALL that were given to Him by God the Father and according to Paul’s statement "unto the church of the Thessalonians which is in God the Father and in the Lord Jesus Christ...wait for his Son from heaven, whom he raised from the dead, even Jesus, which delivered us from the wrath to come." There is a WRATH COMING, but those whose names are written in, {the book of life of the Lamb} have been delivered from that wrath.
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PBC: Rev 20:13 - -- The sea in Scripture is used often in a metaphorical sense as referring to people. We will not strive with the meaning here, because it will make no d...
The sea in Scripture is used often in a metaphorical sense as referring to people. We will not strive with the meaning here, because it will make no difference whether it is a body of water or whether it is referring to people living at the end of time as we know it. They shall each come forth at the bidding of Him who created them. However, the phrase the dead which were in it is very important. The reason is that this is speaking of all who know not Christ in a salvation sense. They have never been called out of that body of death which plunged all men into sin. They have had no part in the first resurrection (regeneration). Not only are they bound in natural death, they shall also be a part of the second death. They represent death and hell which are spoken of in Re 20:14.— Eld. Charles Taylor
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PBC: Rev 20:14 - -- Why is this called the second death? Let Scripture speak for itself as the very word of God. " Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resu...
Why is this called the second death? Let Scripture speak for itself as the very word of God. " Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second death hath no power." {Re 20:6} " Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him. For in that he died, he died unto sin once: but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord." {Ro 6:9-11} By these blessed words we are assured that they, whose names are written in the Lamb’s Book of Life are alive forevermore. They have died in Adam (spiritually, first death) and have been raised (first resurrection) through Christ, and they will never experience the second death. They have passed from death unto life.— Eld. Charles Taylor
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PBC: Rev 20:15 - -- " Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy ...
" Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost; which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour; that being justified by his grace, we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life." {Tit 3:5-7}
All others were cast into the lake of fire. Some might question the justice of this fact. It is self-evident that the better question might be, why were there any whose names are written in the Lamb’s Book of Life? Only God has the answer to these questions.. " Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?" {Ro 9:20} —Eld. Charles Taylor
Gill: Rev 20:11 - -- And I saw a great white throne,.... This vision refers not to the Gospel dispensation, from the exaltation of Christ to his second coming; when he sat...
And I saw a great white throne,.... This vision refers not to the Gospel dispensation, from the exaltation of Christ to his second coming; when he sat down on his throne at the right hand of God, and was declared Lord and Christ; when there was a shaking of the heavens and the earth, a removing of the Mosaic economy, and the ordinances of the ceremonial law in Judea, and of Paganism in the Gentile world; when the Gospel was preached to all nations, and the dead in sins were quickened, and arose and stood before the throne of grace; when the books of the Scriptures were opened and explained, and the book of life was also opened; and by the conversion of some, and not others, it was known who were written in it and who were not, and men were judged to be alive or dead in a spiritual sense, according to the influence the opening of these books had upon them; and the powers of the world, comparable to a sea, and of death and hell, were not able to hold in the dead in sin, when they were called to life, with respect to whom death and hell were destroyed; nor was the Gospel the savour of death to any but to such who were not written in the book of life. This, in other words, is the sum of Cocceius's sense of this vision; but this affair will be over, and all God's elect gathered in by the preaching of the Gospel, before this vision takes place: nor does it respect the restoration of the Jews, who now are as dead, like Ezekiel's dry bones, but will at this time be quickened, and stand upon their feet an exceeding great army, and will be gathered from the several parts where they are as dead; and when it will be known by their conduct and behaviour who are God's elect among them, and who are not; which is Brightman's interpretation of the vision: but this, as we have seen, will come to pass according to the vision in the preceding chapter, before the thousand years begin; whereas this vision will not begin to be accomplished until they are ended: it is best therefore to understand it of the general judgment at the last day, which is the common sense of ancient and modern interpreters; though it seems only to regard the judgment of the wicked, for no other are made mention of in it: the "throne" here seen is a throne of judgment; it is called a "great" one, because a great Person sat upon it, the Word of God, the King of kings and Lord of lords, even he who is the great God, and Judge of the whole earth; and because of the great work that will be transacted upon it, the judgment of all the wicked; this will be the greatest assize that ever was held; it is called the judgment of the great day, and the great and dreadful day of the Lord, Jud 1:6, Mal 4:5 this throne is also said to be a "white" one; just as the same Person is said to sit upon a white cloud, and ride upon a white horse, Rev 14:14 it may be in allusion either to a white and serene cloud, or to a throne of ivory, such an one as Solomon made, 2Ch 9:17 and this is either expressive of the majesty and splendour of it, it being a throne of glory, or a glorious throne, Mat 25:31 or else it may denote the purity and justice of him that sits on it, according to which he will proceed in judgment, and finish it; his character is the righteous judge, and the judgment he will execute will be righteous judgment:
and him that sat on it; the throne was not empty, one sat upon it, who is no other than the Son of God; to whom all judgment is committed, and who is ordained to be Judge of quick and dead; and is every way fit for it, being of great knowledge, wisdom, and sagacity, and of great integrity and faithfulness, as man and Mediator, and being, as God, both omniscient and omnipotent, and so capable both of passing a right sentence, and of executing it; to which may be added, his great majesty and glory, necessary to strike an awe, and command an attention to him:
from whose face the earth and the heavens fled away, and there was found no place for them; which is to be understood not figuratively, as in Rev 6:14 where in the one place is described the destruction of Paganism, and in the other the destruction of the Papacy, and all antichristian powers; but literally, and not of the present earth and heaven, as they now are, for these will be burnt up with fire at the beginning of the thousand years, but of the new heaven and new earth, at the end of them; and the phrases of fleeing away, and place being found no more for them, show the entire annihilation and utter abolition of them; after this there will be no place in being but the heaven of angels and saints, and the lake of fire, in which are the devils and damned spirits: but though this is mentioned here, it will not be till after the judgment is over; for how otherwise will the dead have a place to stand in before the throne, or hell, that is the grave, and also the sea, give up their dead, Rev 20:12 but it is observed here, though afterwards done, to set off the majesty of the Judge upon the throne, at whose sight, and by whose power, this will be effected.
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Gill: Rev 20:12 - -- And I saw the dead,.... An account being given of the Judge, next the persons to be judged are described, and in this clause, by the state and conditi...
And I saw the dead,.... An account being given of the Judge, next the persons to be judged are described, and in this clause, by the state and condition in which they had been; for it cannot be thought they were dead when they stood before the throne, but were raised from the dead; for this character is not descriptive of them as dead in trespasses and sins, though they are such as die in their sins, and rise in them, who are meant, but as having been corporeally dead; these are the rest of the dead, the wicked, who lived not again until the thousand years were ended, Rev 20:5 as for the righteous, they will be judged upon their resurrection from the dead in the beginning of the day of the Lord; and will be declared righteous and blessed, and be called upon and introduced to inherit the kingdom prepared for them, which they shall have possessed a thousand years when these wicked dead will be raised: who are said to be small and great; which may refer either to their age, being children and adult persons; or to their condition, being kings and peasants, high and low, rich and poor; or to their characters, as greater or lesser sinners; and this description respects them as they are in this world, and is designed to show that no consideration whatever, of age, condition, or character, will exempt them from the general judgment. This is a way of speaking used among the Jews h, who say,
"in the world of souls,
The disputations of the schoolmen, about the age and stature in which mankind will rise and be judged, are vain and foolish: these John saw stand before God; that is, Christ, who is God and Judge of all; before his judgment seat and throne, in order to be judged; for they will stand not as ministering to him, nor as having confidence before him; in this sense they shall not stand in the judgment, Psa 1:5 but as guilty persons, to receive their sentence of condemnation. The Alexandrian copy, the Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions read, "before the throne"; the sense is the same; for if they stood before the throne, they must stand before God, that sat upon it: and the books were opened; the book of God's omniscience, which contains all the actions of the wicked, in which all their sins are taken notice of, and will now be brought to light; and the book of his remembrance, in which they are all written as with a pen of iron, and with the point of a diamond; and the book of the creatures, which they have abused, and which will witness against them; and the book of providence, the riches of whose goodness have been despised by them; and the book of the Scriptures, both of law and Gospel, as well as the book of nature, of the light of nature, see Rom 2:12 to which may be added, the book of conscience; the consciences of men will be awakened, and will accuse them, and bear witness against them, and be as good as a thousand witnesses:
and another book was opened, which is the book of life: the same that is mentioned in Rev 3:5 the book of eternal election, See Gill on Rev 3:5, See Gill on Rev 13:8, See Gill on Rev 17:8. No other use seems to be made of this book in the judgment of the wicked, than only to observe whose names were not written in it, as appears from Rev 20:15 reference seems to be had to Dan 7:10. It is a notion that has obtained among the Jews i, that
"at the beginning of the year (or every new year's day)
and in the same treatise k, they represent God at the same time of the year as a
"King, sitting on a throne of judgment, and the books of the living, and the books of the dead,
this with them was a prelude and a figure of the future judgment:
and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works; that is, they were sentenced to everlasting condemnation and death, according to the just demerit of their wicked works; for no other are done by wicked men, nor can any other be in the books, since they are without God and Christ, and destitute of the Spirit, have no principle of grace to act from, nor any good end in view in any action of theirs. So the Jews say l,
"all the works which a man does in this world are "written in a book", and they come into thought before the holy King, and they are manifest before him.''
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Gill: Rev 20:13 - -- And the sea gave up the dead which were in it,.... Which is not to be interpreted metaphorically of the world, and the men of it, who are like the tro...
And the sea gave up the dead which were in it,.... Which is not to be interpreted metaphorically of the world, and the men of it, who are like the troubled sea; but literally of the sea, and of all such who have been drowned in the waters of it, as were Pharaoh and his host; or have died upon the mighty waters, and have been cast into them, and devoured by the fishes; and particular regard may be had to the men of the old world, drowned by the flood; these shall be raised from thence; the sea shall deliver them up: now this, and what is expressed in the next clause, will not be done after the judgment is set, the books are opened, and the sentence passed, but before all this, and in order to it, as the last clause of this verse shows:
and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them; "death", which is here represented as a person, and elsewhere as a king, reigning and having power over men, signifies death in general, and every kind of death of which men have died, whether natural or violent, over whom it will now have no longer dominion, but will be obliged to deliver up all its subjects; and "hell" signifies the grave, which will now be opened, and deliver up all its prisoners, all that have been buried in the earth; see Job 26:5 the Ethiopic version adds, "and the earth delivered up them that were dead in it": but this seems unnecessary after the former:
and they were judged every man according to their works; some to greater, some to lesser punishment, as their sinful works deserved.
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Gill: Rev 20:14 - -- And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire,.... Death cannot be taken properly, nor hell be the place of torment, for devils and damned spirit...
And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire,.... Death cannot be taken properly, nor hell be the place of torment, for devils and damned spirits; since that is that lake of fire, for then the sense would be, hell is cast into hell; but either by these the devil is meant, who has the power of death, and is the prince of hell, were it not that the casting of him into this lake is mentioned before in Rev 20:10 or it denotes the destruction and abolition of death and the grave, that from henceforth they should no more have power over men, nor have any under their dominion, and in their hands; and so what has been promised will now be fully performed, Hos 13:14 see Rev 21:4 or rather the wicked dead, which they shall have delivered up, and will be judged and sentenced to eternal death, Rev 20:13
this is the second death; or the destruction of the soul and body in hell, which will consist in an eternal separation of both from God, and in a continual sense of his wrath and displeasure. The Alexandrian copy and the Complutensian edition read, "this second death is the lake of fire"; and so the Arabic version, "and this is the second death, even the lake of fire"; and not much different is the Ethiopic version, "the second death, which is the fire of hell".
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Gill: Rev 20:15 - -- And whosoever was not found written in the book of life,.... Upon the opening of it, Rev 20:12 as all that worship the beast, and wonder after him, Re...
And whosoever was not found written in the book of life,.... Upon the opening of it, Rev 20:12 as all that worship the beast, and wonder after him, Rev 13:8 and all wicked men, everyone of them:
was cast into the lake of fire; where are the devil, beast, and false prophet, Rev 19:20. It is a saying of R. Isaac m,
"woe to the wicked, who are not written
and in the Targum on Eze 13:9 it is said of the false prophets,
"that
There seems to be some allusion in the phrase used here, and in the preceding verse, and elsewhere in this book, to the lake Asphaltites, a sulphurous lake, where Sodom and Gomorrah stood, which the Jews call the salt sea, or the bituminous lake; and whatsoever was useless, or rejected, or abominable, or accursed, they used to say, to show their rejection and detestation of it, let it be cast into the sea of salt, or the bituminous lake; thus, for instance,
"any vessels that had on them the image of the sun, or of the moon, or of a dragon,
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Rev 20:11 The phrase the earth and the heaven fled from his presence can be understood (1) as visual imagery representing the fear of corruptible matter in the ...
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NET Notes: Rev 20:14 Here καί (kai) has been translated as “then” to indicate the implied sequence within the narrative.
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Geneva Bible: Rev 20:11 ( 19 ) And I saw a great ( 20 ) white throne, and him that sat on it, ( 21 ) from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found n...
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Geneva Bible: Rev 20:12 And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before ( 22 ) God; and the ( 23 ) books were opened: and another book was opened, which is [the book] ( 24 ...
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Geneva Bible: Rev 20:13 ( 25 ) And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were judged every man acco...
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Geneva Bible: Rev 20:14 ( 26 ) And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death.
( 26 ) The last enemy which is death shall be abolished by Chris...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Rev 20:1-15
TSK Synopsis: Rev 20:1-15 - --1 Satan bound for a thousand years.6 The first resurrection; they blessed that have part therein.7 Satan let loose again.8 Gog and Magog.10 The devils...
MHCC -> Rev 20:11-15
MHCC: Rev 20:11-15 - --After the events just foretold, the end will speedily come; and there is no mention of any thing else, before the appearing of Christ to judge the wor...
Matthew Henry -> Rev 20:11-15
Matthew Henry: Rev 20:11-15 - -- The utter destruction of the devil's kingdom very properly leads to an account of the day of judgment, which will determine every man's everlasting ...
Barclay -> Rev 20:11-15; Rev 20:11-15
Barclay: Rev 20:11-15 - --Now comes the final judgment. God, the Judge, is on his great white throne which symbolizes his unapproachable purity.
It may be that some will fin...
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Barclay: Rev 20:11-15 - --Now follows the judgment of mankind.
It is the judgment of great and small. There is none so great as to escape the judgment of God, and none so uni...
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...
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Constable: Rev 20:1-15 - --M. The millennial reign of Christ ch. 20
John recorded his vision of Jesus Christ's reign on the earth f...
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Constable: Rev 20:11-15 - --4. The judgment of the wicked 20:11-15
20:11 This "And I saw" introduces something else John saw in this vision (cf. 19:11, 17, 19; 20:1, 4, 12; 21:1,...
College -> Rev 20:1-15
College: Rev 20:1-15 - --REVELATION 20
i. Deliverance from Babylonian Captivity (20:1-22:6)
Revelation 20:1-22:5 consists of a very beautiful and very elaborate network of s...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Evidence: Rev 20:11 No hiding from God . " Whither can the enemies of God flee? If up to heaven their high-flown impudence could carry them, His right hand of holiness wo...
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