![](images/minus.gif)
Text -- Revelation 6:12-17 (NET)
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/information.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Rev 6:12 - -- There was a great earthquake ( seismos megas egeneto ).
"There came a great earthquake."Jesus spoke of earthquakes in his great eschatological discou...
There was a great earthquake (
"There came a great earthquake."Jesus spoke of earthquakes in his great eschatological discourse (Mar 13:8). In Mat 24:29 the powers of the heavens will be shaken.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:12 - -- As sackcloth of hair ( hōs sakkos trichinos ).
Sakkos (Attic sakos ), Latin saccus , English sack , originally a bag for holding things (Gen ...
As sackcloth of hair (
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:12 - -- As blood ( hōs haima ).
In Act 2:20 we find Peter interpreting the apocalyptic eschatological language of Joe 2:31 about the sun being turned into ...
As blood (
In Act 2:20 we find Peter interpreting the apocalyptic eschatological language of Joe 2:31 about the sun being turned into darkness and the moon into blood as pointing to the events of the day of Pentecost as also "the great day of the Lord."Peter’ s interpretation of Joel should make us cautious about too literal an exegesis of these grand symbols.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:13 - -- Her unripe figs ( tous olunthous autēs ).
An old word (Latin grossi ) for figs that grow in winter and fall off in the spring without getting rip...
Her unripe figs (
An old word (Latin grossi ) for figs that grow in winter and fall off in the spring without getting ripe (So Rev 2:11.), here only in N.T. Jesus used the fig tree (Mar 13:28) as a sign of the "end of the world’ s long winter"(Swete). Cf. Isa 34:4; Nah 3:12.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:13 - -- When she is shaken of a great wind ( hupo anemou megalou seiomenē ).
Present passive participle of seiō , "being shaken by a great wind."See Mat ...
When she is shaken of a great wind (
Present passive participle of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:14 - -- Was removed ( apechōristhē ).
First aorist passive indicative of apochōrizō , to separate, to part (Act 15:39). "The heaven was parted."
Was removed (
First aorist passive indicative of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:14 - -- As a scroll when it is rolled up ( hōs biblion helissomenon ).
Present passive participle of helissō , old verb, to roll up, in N.T. only here (f...
As a scroll when it is rolled up (
Present passive participle of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:14 - -- Were moved ( ekinēthēsan ).
First aorist passive indicative of kineō , to move.
Were moved (
First aorist passive indicative of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:14 - -- Out of their places ( ek tōn topōn autōn ).
See also Rev 16:20 for these violent displacements in the earth’ s crust. Cf. Nah 1:5; Jer 4:2...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:15 - -- The princes ( hoi megistānes ).
Late word from the superlative megistos , in lxx, Josephus, papyri, in N.T. only in Mar 6:21; Rev 6:15; Rev 18:23, ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:15 - -- The chief captains ( hoi chiliarchoi ).
The commanders of thousands, the military tribunes (Mar 6:21; Rev 19:18).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:15 - -- The rich ( hoi plousioi ).
Not merely those in civil and military authority will be terror-stricken, but the self-satisfied and complacent rich (Jam ...
The rich (
Not merely those in civil and military authority will be terror-stricken, but the self-satisfied and complacent rich (Jam 5:4.).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:15 - -- The strong ( hoi ischuroi ).
Who usually scoff at fear. See the list in Rev 13:16; Rev 19:18. Cf. Luk 21:26.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:15 - -- Every bondman ( pās doulos )
and freeman (kai eleutheros ). The two extremes of society.
Every bondman (
and freeman (
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:15 - -- Hid themselves in the caves and in the rocks of the mountains ( ekrupsan heautous eis ta spēlaia kai eis tas petras tōn oreōn ).
Based on Isa 2...
Hid themselves in the caves and in the rocks of the mountains (
Based on Isa 2:10, Isa 2:18. First aorist active indicative of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:16 - -- They say ( legousin ).
Vivid dramatic present active indicative, as is natural here.
They say (
Vivid dramatic present active indicative, as is natural here.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:16 - -- Fall on us ( Pesate eph' hēmās ).
Second aorist (first aorist ending) imperative of piptō , tense of urgency, do it now.
Fall on us (
Second aorist (first aorist ending) imperative of
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:16 - -- And hide us ( kai krupsate hēmās ).
Same tense of urgency again from kruptō (verb in Rev 6:15). Both imperatives come in inverted order from ...
And hide us (
Same tense of urgency again from
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:16 - -- From the face of him that ( apo prosōpou tou , etc.).
"What sinners dread most is not death, but the revealed Presence of God"(Swete). Cf. Gen 3:8.
From the face of him that (
"What sinners dread most is not death, but the revealed Presence of God"(Swete). Cf. Gen 3:8.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:16 - -- And from the wrath of the Lamb ( kai apo tēs orgēs tou arniou ).
Repetition of "the grave irony"(Swete) of Rev 5:5. The Lamb is the Lion again in...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:17 - -- The great day ( hē hēmera hē megalē ).
The phrase occurs in the O.T. prophets (Joe 2:11, Joe 2:31; Zep 1:14. Cf. Jud 1:6) and is here combine...
The great day (
The phrase occurs in the O.T. prophets (Joe 2:11, Joe 2:31; Zep 1:14. Cf. Jud 1:6) and is here combined with "of their wrath"(
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Robertson: Rev 6:17 - -- And who is able to stand? ( kai tis dunatai stathēnai̇ ).
Very much like the words in Nah 1:6; Mal 3:2. First aorist passive infinitive of histē...
And who is able to stand? (
Very much like the words in Nah 1:6; Mal 3:2. First aorist passive infinitive of
Vincent: Rev 6:12 - -- The sixth seal
" The Apocalypse is molded by the great discourse of our Lord upon 'the last things' which has been preserved for us in the first ...
The sixth seal
" The Apocalypse is molded by the great discourse of our Lord upon 'the last things' which has been preserved for us in the first three Gospels (Mat 24:4; 25.; Mark 13:5-37; Luke 21:8-36; compare 17:20-37). The parallelism between the two is, to a certain extent, acknowledged by all inquirers, and is indeed, in many respects, so obvious, that it can hardly escape the notice of even the ordinary reader. Let any one compare, for example, the account of the opening of the sixth seal with the description of the end (Mat 24:29, Mat 24:30), and he will see that the one is almost a transcript of the other. It is remarkable that we find no account of this discourse in the Gospel of St. John; nor does it seem as sufficient explanation of the omission that the later Evangelist was satisfied with the records of the discourse already given by his predecessors" (Milligan).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Rev 6:12 - -- Earthquake ( σεισμὸς )
Lit., shaking . Used also of a tempest . See on Mat 8:24, and compare Mat 24:7. The word here is not necessar...
Earthquake (
Lit., shaking . Used also of a tempest . See on Mat 8:24, and compare Mat 24:7. The word here is not necessarily confined to shaking the earth. In Mat 24:29, it is predicted that the powers of the heavens shall be shaken (
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Rev 6:12 - -- Black as sackcloth of hair ( μέλας ὡς σάκκος )
Compare Mat 24:29; Isa 50:3; Isa 13:10; Jer 4:23; Eze 32:7, Eze 32:8; Joe 2:31;...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
The moon (
Add
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Rev 6:13 - -- Untimely figs ( ὀλύνθους )
Better, as Rev., unripe . Compare Mat 24:32; Isa 34:4. Only here in the New Testament.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Rev 6:14 - -- Departed ( ἀπεχωρισθη )
The verb means to separate , sever . Rev., was removed .
Departed (
The verb means to separate , sever . Rev., was removed .
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Rev 6:15 - -- Chief captains ( χιλίαρχοι )
See on Mar 6:21, and see on centurion , Luk 7:2.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Rev 6:15 - -- The mighty ( οἱ δυνατοὶ )
The best texts read οἱ ἰσχυροὶ. Rev., the strong . For the difference in meaning, see o...
The mighty (
The best texts read
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Every free man
Omit every , and read as Rev., every bondman and free man .
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Vincent: Rev 6:15 - -- In the dens ( εἰς τὰ σπήλαια )
Rev., caves . The preposition εἰς into implies running for shelter into.
In the dens (
Rev., caves . The preposition
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Said (
Lit., say . So Rev.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Rev 6:12 - -- This sixth seal seems particularly to point out God's judgment on the wicked departed. St. John saw how the end of the world was even then set before ...
This sixth seal seems particularly to point out God's judgment on the wicked departed. St. John saw how the end of the world was even then set before those unhappy spirits. This representation might be made to them, without anything of it being perceived upon earth. The like representation is made in heaven, Rev 11:18.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Rev 6:12 - -- Or shaking, not of the earth only, but the heavens. This is a farther description of the representation made to those unhappy souls.
Or shaking, not of the earth only, but the heavens. This is a farther description of the representation made to those unhappy souls.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Rev 6:13 - -- Yea, and so they surely will, let astronomers fix their magnitude as they please. As a fig tree casteth its untimely figs, when it is shaken by a migh...
Yea, and so they surely will, let astronomers fix their magnitude as they please. As a fig tree casteth its untimely figs, when it is shaken by a mighty wind - How sublimely is the violence of that shaking expressed by this comparison!
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Rev 6:14 - -- When the scripture compares some very great with a little thing, the majesty and omnipotence of God, before whom great things are little, is highly ex...
When the scripture compares some very great with a little thing, the majesty and omnipotence of God, before whom great things are little, is highly exalted.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
What a mountain is to the land, that an island is to the sea.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Rev 6:15 - -- There are also rocks on the plains; but they were rocks on high, which they besought to fall upon them.
There are also rocks on the plains; but they were rocks on high, which they besought to fall upon them.
JFB: Rev 6:12 - -- As Rev 6:4, Rev 6:6-8, the sword, famine, and pestilence, answer to Mat 24:6-7; Rev 6:9-10, as to martyrdoms, answer to Mat 24:9-10; so this passage, ...
As Rev 6:4, Rev 6:6-8, the sword, famine, and pestilence, answer to Mat 24:6-7; Rev 6:9-10, as to martyrdoms, answer to Mat 24:9-10; so this passage, Rev 6:12, Rev 6:17, answers to Mat 24:29-30, "the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven; . . . then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming"; imagery describing the portents of the immediate coming of the day of the Lord; but not the coming itself until the elect are sealed, and the judgments invoked by the martyrs descend on the earth, the sea, and the trees (Rev 7:1-3).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:12 - -- Greek, "shaking" of the heavens, the sea, and the dry land; the shaking of these mutable things being the necessary preliminary to the setting up of t...
Greek, "shaking" of the heavens, the sea, and the dry land; the shaking of these mutable things being the necessary preliminary to the setting up of those things which cannot be shaken. This is one of the catchwords [WORDSWORTH] connecting the sixth seal with the sixth trumpet (Rev 11:13) and the seventh vial (Rev 16:17-21); also the seventh seal (Rev 8:5).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:12 - -- One kind, made of the "hair" of Cilician goats, was called "cilicium," or Cilician cloth, and was used for tents, &c. Paul, a Cilician, made such tent...
One kind, made of the "hair" of Cilician goats, was called "cilicium," or Cilician cloth, and was used for tents, &c. Paul, a Cilician, made such tents (Act 18:3).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:12 - -- A, B, C, and oldest versions read, "the whole moon"; the full moon; not merely the crescent moon.
A, B, C, and oldest versions read, "the whole moon"; the full moon; not merely the crescent moon.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:13 - -- (Isa 34:4; Nah 3:12). The Church shall be then ripe for glorification, the Antichristian world for destruction, which shall be accompanied with might...
(Isa 34:4; Nah 3:12). The Church shall be then ripe for glorification, the Antichristian world for destruction, which shall be accompanied with mighty phenomena in nature. As to the stars falling to the earth, Scripture describes natural phenomena as they would appear to the spectator, not in the language of scientific accuracy; and yet, while thus adapting itself to ordinary men, it drops hints which show that it anticipates the discoveries of modern science.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:14 - -- Greek, "was separated from" its place; "was made to depart." Not as ALFORD, "parted asunder"; for, on the contrary, it was rolled together as a scroll...
Greek, "was separated from" its place; "was made to depart." Not as ALFORD, "parted asunder"; for, on the contrary, it was rolled together as a scroll which had been open is rolled up and laid aside. There is no "asunder one from another" here in the Greek, as in Act 15:39, which ALFORD copies.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:14 - -- (Psa 121:1, Margin; Jer 3:23; Jer 4:24; Nah 1:5). This total disruption shall be the precursor of the new earth, just as the pre-Adamic convulsions p...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:15 - -- Where was now the spirit of those whom the world has so greatly feared? [BENGEL].
Where was now the spirit of those whom the world has so greatly feared? [BENGEL].
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:15 - -- The three oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, transpose thus, "chief captains . . . rich men."
The three oldest manuscripts, A, B, C, transpose thus, "chief captains . . . rich men."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Literally "into"; ran into, so as to hide themselves in.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:17 - -- Literally, "the day, the great (day)," which can only mean the last great day. After the Lord has exhausted all His ordinary judgments, the sword, fam...
Literally, "the day, the great (day)," which can only mean the last great day. After the Lord has exhausted all His ordinary judgments, the sword, famine, pestilence, and wild beasts, and still sinners are impenitent, the great day of the Lord itself' shall come. Mat. 24:6-29 plainly forms a perfect parallelism to the six seals, not only in the events, but also in the order of their occurrence: Mat 24:3, the first seal; Mat 24:6, the second seal; Mat 24:7, the third seal; Mat 24:7, end, the fourth seal; Mat 24:9, the fifth seal, the persecutions and abounding iniquity under which, as well as consequent judgments accompanied with gospel preaching to all nations as a witness, are particularly detailed, Mat. 24:9-28; Mat 24:29, the sixth seal.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Rev 6:17 - -- To stand justified, and not condemned before the Judge. Thus the sixth seal brings us to the verge of the Lord's coming. The ungodly "tribes of the ea...
To stand justified, and not condemned before the Judge. Thus the sixth seal brings us to the verge of the Lord's coming. The ungodly "tribes of the earth" tremble at the signs of His immediate approach. But before He actually inflicts the blow in person, "the elect" must be "gathered "out.
Clarke: Rev 6:12 - -- The sixth seal - This seal also is opened and introduced by Jesus Christ alone
The sixth seal - This seal also is opened and introduced by Jesus Christ alone
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:12 - -- A great earthquake - A most stupendous change in the civil and religious constitution of the world. If it refer to Constantine the Great, the change...
A great earthquake - A most stupendous change in the civil and religious constitution of the world. If it refer to Constantine the Great, the change that was made by his conversion to Christianity might be very properly represented under the emblem of an earthquake, and the other symbols mentioned in this and the following verses
The sun - the ancient pagan government of the Roman empire, was totally darkened; and, like a black hair sackcloth, was degraded and humbled to the dust
The moon - the ecclesiastical state of the same empire, became as blood - was totally ruined, their sacred rites abrogated, their priests and religious institutions desecrated, their altars cast down, their temples destroyed, or turned into places for Christian worship.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:13 - -- The stars of heaven - The gods and goddesses, demi-gods, and deified heroes, of their poetical and mythological heaven, were prostrated indiscrimina...
The stars of heaven - The gods and goddesses, demi-gods, and deified heroes, of their poetical and mythological heaven, were prostrated indiscriminately, and lay as useless as the figs or fruit of a tree shaken down before ripe by a tempestuous wind.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:14 - -- And the heaven departed as a scroll - The whole system of pagan and idolatrous worship, with all its spiritual, secular, and superstitious influence...
And the heaven departed as a scroll - The whole system of pagan and idolatrous worship, with all its spiritual, secular, and superstitious influence, was blasted, shrivelled up, and rendered null and void, as a parchment scroll when exposed to the action of a strong fire
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:14 - -- And every mountain - All the props, supports, and dependencies of the empire, whether regal allies, tributary kings, dependent colonies, or mercenar...
And every mountain - All the props, supports, and dependencies of the empire, whether regal allies, tributary kings, dependent colonies, or mercenary troops, were all moved out of their places, so as to stand no longer in the same relation to that empire, and its worship, support, and maintenance, as they formerly did
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:14 - -- And island - The heathen temples, with their precincts and enclosures, cut off from the common people, and into which none could come but the privil...
And island - The heathen temples, with their precincts and enclosures, cut off from the common people, and into which none could come but the privileged, may be here represented by islands, for the same reasons.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:15 - -- The kings of the earth, etc. - All the secular powers who had endeavored to support the pagan worship by authority, influence, riches, political wis...
The kings of the earth, etc. - All the secular powers who had endeavored to support the pagan worship by authority, influence, riches, political wisdom, and military skill; with every bondman - all slaves, who were in life and limb addicted to their masters or owners
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:15 - -- And every freeman - Those who had been manumitted, commonly called freedmen, and who were attached, through gratitude, to the families of their libe...
And every freeman - Those who had been manumitted, commonly called freedmen, and who were attached, through gratitude, to the families of their liberators. All hid themselves - were astonished at the total overthrow of the heathen empire, and the revolution which had then taken place.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:16 - -- Said to the mountains and rocks - Expressions which denote the strongest perturbation and alarm. They preferred any kind of death to that which they...
Said to the mountains and rocks - Expressions which denote the strongest perturbation and alarm. They preferred any kind of death to that which they apprehended from this most awful revolution
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:16 - -- From the face of him that sitteth on the throne - They now saw that all these terrible judgments came from the Almighty; and that Christ, the author...
From the face of him that sitteth on the throne - They now saw that all these terrible judgments came from the Almighty; and that Christ, the author of Christianity, was now judging, condemning, and destroying them for their cruel persecutions of his followers.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:17 - -- For the great day of his wrath - The decisive and manifest time in which he will execute judgment on the oppressors of his people
For the great day of his wrath - The decisive and manifest time in which he will execute judgment on the oppressors of his people
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Rev 6:17 - -- Who shall be able to stand? - No might can prevail against the might of God. All these things may literally apply to the final destruction of Jerusa...
Who shall be able to stand? - No might can prevail against the might of God. All these things may literally apply to the final destruction of Jerusalem, and to the revolution which took place in the Roman empire under Constantine the Great. Some apply them to the day of judgment; but they do not seem to have that awful event in view. These two events were the greatest that have ever taken place in the world, from the flood to the eighteenth century of the Christian era; and may well justify the strong figurative language used above
Through I do not pretend to say that my remarks on this chapter point out its true signification, yet I find others have applied it in the same way. Dr. Dodd observes that the fall of Babylon, Idumea, Judah, Egypt, and Jerusalem, has been described by the prophets in language equally pompous, figurative, and strong. See Isa 13:10; Isa 34:4, concerning Babylon and Idumea; Jer 4:23, Jer 4:24, concerning Judah; Eze 32:7, concerning Egypt; Joe 2:10, Joe 2:31, concerning Jerusalem; and our Lord himself, Mat 24:29, concerning the same city. "Now,"says he, "it is certain that the fall of any of these cities or kingdoms was not of greater concern or consequence to the world, nor more deserving to be described in pompous figures, than the fall of the pagan Roman empire, when the great lights of the heathen world, the sun, moon, and stars, the powers civil and ecclesiastical, were all eclipsed and obscured, the heathen emperors and Caesars were slain, the heathen priests and augurs were extirpated, the heathen officers and magistrates were removed, the temples were demolished, and their revenues were devoted to better uses. It is customary with the prophets, after they have described a thing in the most symbolical and figurative manner, to represent the same again in plainer language; and the same method is observed here, Rev 6:15-17 : And the kings of the earth, etc. That is, Maximin, Galerius, Maxentius, Licinius, etc., with all their adherents and followers, were so routed and dispersed that they hid themselves in dens, etc.; expressions used to denote the utmost terror and confusion. This is, therefore, a triumph of Christ over his heathen enemies, and a triumph after a severe persecution; so that the time and all the circumstances, as well as the series and order of the prophecy, agree perfectly with this interpretation. Galerius, Maximin, and Licinius, made even a public confession of their guilt, recalled their decrees and edicts against the Christians, and acknowledged the just judgments of God and of Christ in their own destruction."See Newton, Lowman, etc., and Dr. Dodd on this chapter, with the works of several more recent authors.
Defender: Rev 6:12 - -- While the inhabitants of the earth are still suffering under the famines, plagues and violence of the earlier seal judgments, a great physical catacly...
While the inhabitants of the earth are still suffering under the famines, plagues and violence of the earlier seal judgments, a great physical cataclysm will suddenly strike. For the first time in history, a global earthquake will convulse the earth, accompanied by tremendous volcanic eruptions, spewing vast quantities of dust particles into the upper atmosphere, turning the appearance of the sun into darkness and the moon blood-red. Note also that several Old Testament prophecies of the coming "day of the Lord" apparently predict the same catastrophe (Joe 2:30, Joe 2:31; Zep 1:15; Isa 13:9, Isa 13:10). Very little is known about the triggering causes of earthquakes, but they are attributed to great rock faults and tectonic instabilities. Perhaps occasioned in part by the worldwide droughts and falling water levels resulting from the earlier judgments, this global network of faults will somehow coalesce into one gigantic "shaking" of the whole earth (the Greek word for "earthquake" is
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Rev 6:13 - -- The Greek word for "star" (iaster) can mean any object in the heavens, including planets, asteroids and meteorites. Planetary scientists have long bee...
The Greek word for "star" (
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Rev 6:14 - -- This strange phenomenon (also predicted in Isa 34:4) may relate to the moving cloud of volcanic dust as it is rapidly carried across the sky, but an a...
This strange phenomenon (also predicted in Isa 34:4) may relate to the moving cloud of volcanic dust as it is rapidly carried across the sky, but an alternate possibility is that the global earthquake will cause the entire crust of the earth to shift, causing "every mountain and island" to be "moved out of their places" and the sky itself to appear to those on the earth's surface to "depart.""
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Rev 6:15 - -- Contrast the attitude of "the kings of the earth" mentioned in Psa 2:2 to their positions presented here in Revelation.
Contrast the attitude of "the kings of the earth" mentioned in Psa 2:2 to their positions presented here in Revelation.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Rev 6:16 - -- By this time, the people on earth will begin to realize that the great judgments are from God and the Lamb. God's witnesses will have been proclaiming...
By this time, the people on earth will begin to realize that the great judgments are from God and the Lamb. God's witnesses will have been proclaiming this fact, and this may even have been "the testimony" of the martyrs (Rev 6:9) which led to their being put to death. Some conjecture that orbiting satellites will be transmitting scenes to earth showing the great assemblage high in the atmospheric heavens and the events taking place there at the throne of the Lamb."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Defender: Rev 6:17 - -- The "great day of His wrath" constitutes the initial phase of "the day of the Lord" prophesied in many of the Old Testament Scriptures (Isa 13:9; Joe ...
TSK: Rev 6:12 - -- there : Rev 8:5, Rev 11:13, Rev 16:18; 1Ki 19:11-13; Isa 29:6; Amo 1:1; Zec 14:5; Mat 24:7; Mat 27:54, Mat 28:2
the sun : Isa 13:9, Isa 13:10, Isa 24:...
there : Rev 8:5, Rev 11:13, Rev 16:18; 1Ki 19:11-13; Isa 29:6; Amo 1:1; Zec 14:5; Mat 24:7; Mat 27:54, Mat 28:2
the sun : Isa 13:9, Isa 13:10, Isa 24:23, Isa 60:19, Isa 60:20; Eze 32:7, Eze 32:8; Joe 2:10,Joe 2:30,Joe 2:31, Joe 3:15; Amo 8:9; Hag 2:6, Hag 2:7, Hag 2:21, Hag 2:22; Mat 24:29, Mat 27:45; Mar 13:24, Mar 13:25, Mar 15:33; Luk 23:44, Luk 23:45; Act 2:19, Act 2:20
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Rev 6:13 - -- the stars : Rev 8:10-12, Rev 9:1; Eze 32:7; Dan 8:10; Luk 21:25
untimely figs : or green figs
of a : Isa 7:2, Isa 33:9; Dan 4:14; Nah 3:12
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Rev 6:14 - -- the heaven : Psa 102:26; Isa 34:4; Heb 1:11-13; 2Pe 3:10
and every : Rev 16:20; Isa 2:14-17; Jer 3:23, Jer 4:23-26, Jer 51:25; Hab 3:6, Hab 3:10
the heaven : Psa 102:26; Isa 34:4; Heb 1:11-13; 2Pe 3:10
and every : Rev 16:20; Isa 2:14-17; Jer 3:23, Jer 4:23-26, Jer 51:25; Hab 3:6, Hab 3:10
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Rev 6:15 - -- the kings : Rev 18:9-11, Rev 19:13-21; Job 34:19, Job 34:20; Psa 2:10-12, Psa 49:1, Psa 49:2, Psa 76:12, Psa 110:5, Psa 110:6; Isa 24:21, Isa 24:22
hi...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Rev 6:16 - -- Fall : Rev 10:6; Jer 8:3; Hos 10:8; Luk 23:30
the face : Rev 4:2, Rev 4:5, Rev 4:9, Rev 20:11
and from : Rev 6:10, Rev 19:15; Psa 2:9-12, Psa 14:5, Ps...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Rev 6:17 - -- the great : Rev 11:18, Rev 16:14; Isa. 13:6-22; Jer 30:7; Joe 2:31; Zep 1:14-18; Rom 2:5; Jud 1:6
who : Psa 76:7, Psa 130:3, Psa 130:4; Joe 2:11; Mal ...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Rev 6:12-17
Barnes: Rev 6:12-17 - -- And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal - See the notes at Rev 5:1; Rev 6:1. And, lo, there was a great earthquake - Before endeav...
And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal - See the notes at Rev 5:1; Rev 6:1.
And, lo, there was a great earthquake - Before endeavoring to ascertain to what the sixth seal was designed to refer, it is proper, as in the previous cases, to furnish a particular explanation of the meaning of the symbols. All the symbols represented in the opening of this seal denote consternation, commotion, changes; but still they are all significant, and we are to suppose that something would occur corresponding with each one of them. It cannot be supposed that the things here described were represented on the part of the roll or volume that was now unfolded in any other way than that they were pictures, or that the whole was a species of panoramic representation made to pass before the eyes. Thus understood, it would not be difficult to represent each one of these things in a painting: as the heaving ground - the agitated forests - the trembling hills - the falling cities and houses - the sun blackened, and the moon turned to blood:
(a) The earthquake, Rev 6:12; "There was a great earthquake."The word used here denotes a shaking or agitation of the earth. The effect, when violent, is to produce important changes - opening chasms in the earth; throwing down houses and temples; sinking hills, and elevating plains; causing ponds and lakes to dry up, or forming them where none existed; elevating the ocean from its bed, rending rocks, etc. As all that occurs in the opening of the other seals is symbolical, it is to be presumed that this is also, and that for the fulfillment of this we are not to look for a literal earthquake, but for such agitations and changes in the world as would be properly symbolized by this. The earthquake, as a symbol, would merely denote great agitations or overturnings on the earth. The particular character of those changes must be determined by other circumstances in the symbol that would limit and explain it.
There are, it is said, but three literal earthquakes referred to in the Scripture: that mentioned in 1Ki 19:11; that in Uzziah’ s time, Amo 1:1; Zec 14:5; and what took place at the Saviour’ s death. All the rest are emblematical or symbolical-referring mostly to civil commotions and changes. Then in Hag 2:6-7; "Yet once, it is a little while, and I will shake the heavens and the earth, and the sea, and the dry land, and I will shake all nations, and the desire of all nations shall come; and I will fill this house with glory, saith the Lord of hosts."That is, there would be great agitations in the world before he came. See the notes on Heb 12:26-28. So also great changes and commotions are referred to in Isa 24:19-20; "The earth is utterly broken down, the earth is clean dissolved, the earth is moved exceedingly. The earth shall reel to and fro like a drunkard, and shall be removed like a cottage."An earthquake, if there were no other circumstances limiting and explaining the symbol, would merely denote great agitation and commotion - as if states and empires were tumbling to ruin. As this is here a mere symbol, it is not necessary to look for a literal fulfillment, or to expect to find in history actual earthquakes to which this had reference, anymore than when it is said that "the heavens departed as a scroll"we are to expect that they will be literally rolled up; but if, in the course of history, earthquakes preceded remarkable political convulsions and revolutions, it would be proper to represent such events in this way.
(b) The darkening of the sun: "And the sun became black as sackcloth of hair."Sackcloth was a coarse black cloth, commonly, though not always, made of hair. It was used for sacks, for strainers, and for mourning garments; and as thus worn it was not an improper emblem of sadness and distress. The idea here is, that the sun put on a dark, dingy, doleful appearance, as if it were in mourning. The general image, then, in this emblem, is that of calamity - as if the very sun should put on the robes of mourning. We are by no means to suppose that this was literally to occur, but that some great calamity would happen, of which this would be an appropriate emblem. See the Isa 13:10 note; Mat 24:29 note; Compare Isa 24:23; Isa 34:4; 1, 3; Isa 60:19-20; Eze 32:7-8; Joe 2:10; Joe 3:15-16; Amo 8:9. What is the particular nature of the calamity is to be learned from other parts of the symbol.
© The discoloration of the moon: "And the moon became as blood."Red like blood - either from the smoke and vapor that usually precedes an earthquake, or as a mere emblem. This also would betoken calamity, and perhaps the symbol may be so far limited and modified by this as to denote war, for that would be most naturally suggested by the color - red. Compare the notes on Rev 6:4 of this chapter. But any great calamity would be appropriately represented by this - as the change of the moon to such a color would be a natural emblem of distress.
(d) The falling of the stars, Rev 6:13; "And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth."This language is derived from the poetic idea that the sky seems to be a solid concave, in which the stars are set, and that when any convulsion takes place, that concave will be shaken, and the stars will be loosened and fall from their places. See this language explained in the notes on Isa 34:4. Sometimes the expanse above us is spoken of as a curtain that is spread out, and that may be rolled up; sometimes as a solid crystalline expanse in which the stars are fixed. According to either representation the stars are described as falling to the earth. If the expanse is rolled up, the stars, having nothing to support them, fall if violent tempests or concussions shake the heavens, the stars, loosened from their fixtures, fall to the earth. Stars, in the Scriptures, are symbols of princes and rulers (see Dan 8:10; Rev 8:10-11; Rev 9:1); and the natural meaning of this symbol is, that there would be commotions which would unsettle princes, and bring them down from their thrones - like stars falling from the sky.
Even as a fig tree casteth her untimely figs - Mart., "green"; Greek,
(e) The departing of the heavens, Rev 6:14; "And the heaven departed as a scroll."That is, as a book or volume -
(f) The removal of mountains and islands, Rev 6:14; "And every mountain and island were moved out of their places."This would denote convulsions in the political or moral world, as great as would occur in the physical world if the very mountains were removed and the islands should change their places. We are not to suppose that this would literally occur; but we should be authorized from this to expect that, in regard to those things which seemed to be permanent and fixed on an immov able basis, like mountains and islands, there would be violent and important changes. If thrones and dynasties long established were overthrown; if institutions that seemed to be fixed and per manent were abolished; if a new order of things should rise in the political world, the meaning of the symbol, so far as the language is concerned, would be fulfilled.
(g) The universal consternation, Rev 6:15-17; "And the kings of the earth, etc."The design of these verses Rev 6:15-17, in the varied language used, is evidently to denote universal consternation and alarm - as if the earth should be convulsed, and the stars should fall, and the heavens should pass away. This consternation would extend to all classes of people, and fill the world with alarm, as if the end of all things were coming.
The kings of the earth - Rulers - all who occupied thrones.
The great men - High officers of state.
And the rich men - Their wealth would not secure them from destruction, and they would be alarmed like others.
And the chief captains - The commanders of armies, who tremble like other men when God appears judgment.
And the mighty men - Men of great prowess in battle, but who feel now that they have no power to withstand God.
And every bondman - Servant -
And every freeman - Whether the master of slaves or not. The idea is, that all classes of people, high and low, would be filled with alarm.
Hid themselves in the dens - Among the caves or caverns in the mountains. See the notes on Isa 2:19. These places were resorted to for safety in times of danger. Compare 1Sa 13:6; 24; Jdg 6:2; Jer 41:9; Josephus, Antiq. book 14, chapter 15; Jewish Wars , book 1, chapter 16.
And in the rocks of the mountains - Among the crags or the fastnesses of the mountains - also natural places of refuge in times of hostile invasion or danger. See the notes on Isa 2:21.
And said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, ... - Rev 6:16. This language is found substantially in Hos 10:8; "And they shall say to the mountains, Cover us; and to the hills, Fall on us."It is also used by the Saviour as denoting the consternation which would occur at his coming: "Then shall they begin to say to the mountains, Fall on us; and to the hills, Cover us,"Luk 23:30. It is language denoting consternation, and an awful fear of impending wrath. The state of mind is that where there is an apprehension that God himself is coming forth with the direct instruments of his vengeance, and where there is a desire rather to be crushed by falling rocks and hills than by the vengeance of his uplifted arm.
From the face of him that sitteth on the throne - The face of God - for he seems to be coming forth with the displays of his vengeance. It is not said that God would actually come forth in a visible form, lint their consternation would be as great as if he were to do this; the state of mind indicated by this was an apprehension that it would be so.
And from the wrath of the Lamb - The Lamb of God; the Lord Jesus. See the notes on Rev 5:6. There seems to be an incongruity between the words "wrath,"and "Lamb"; but the word "Lamb"here is so far a proper name as to be used only to designate the Redeemer. He comes forth to execute wrath, not as a Lamb, but as the Son of God, who bore that name. It would seem from this that they who thus dreaded the impending terrors were aware of their source, or had knowledge enough to understand by whom they were to be inflicted. They would see that these were divine judgments, and would apprehend that the end of the world drew near.
For the great day of his wrath is come - Rev 6:17. The threatening judgments would be so severe and awful that they would suppose that the end of the world was coming.
And who shall be able to stand? - To stand before him, or to withstand his judgments.
It is unnecessary to say that there has been, in this case, as in reference to every other part of the Book of Revelation, a great diversity of opinion respecting the events symbolized by this seal. Grotius applied it to the wars between the Jews and Romans under Nero and Vespasian; Dr. Hammond supposed that the defeat of the Jewish leaders in those wars was particularly symbolized; Mr. Brightman referred these symbols to the persecution under Diocletian; Mr. Mede, Dr. Cressner, Dr. More, Mr. Whiston, Mr. Jurien, Mr. Daubuz, Mr. Lowman, Dr. Newton, Mr. Elliott, and others, refer it to the defeat of the pagan powers, and the final suppression of those powers as opposed to Christianity; Vitringa regarded it as foreshadowing the overthrow of the anti-Christian powers of the western Roman empire; Cocceius explains it of the wars of the Emperor Frederick against the German princes in the sixteenth century; Dr. Woodhouse, of the day of vengeance at the end of the world; Mr. Cunninghame, of the same period as the seventh trumpet, commencing with the French revolution, and to be consummated by the visible advent of the Son of God; Prof. Stuart, of the destruction of Jerusalem; and Mr. Lord, of a series of events, part of which are fulfilled, three of them corresponding with the first three vials - the first expressive of the revolution of France, the second of despotism extending through several rears, and the third of the overthrow of that violent dynasty, at the fall of Bonaparte, in 1815.
It is not my purpose to examine these views; but, amidst this great variety of opinion, it seems to me that the obvious and natural application of the opening of the seal has not been adverted to. I shall suggest it because it is the most natural and obvious, and seems to be demanded by the explanations given of the previous seals. It is, in one word, the impending judgments from the invasions of the northern hordes of Goths and Vandals, threatening the breaking up of the Roman empire - the gathering of the storm, and the hovering of those barbarians on the borders of the empire; the approaches which they made from time to time toward the capital, though restrained as yet from taking it; the tempest of wrath that was, as it were, suspended yet on the frontiers, until the events recorded in the next chapter should occur, then bursting forth in wrath in successive blasts, as denoted by the first four trumpets of the seventh seal Rev 8:1-13, when the empire was entirely overthrown by the Goths and Vandals. The precise point of time which I suppose this seal occupies is that succeeding the last persecution.
It embraces the preparatory arrangements of these hordes of invaders - their gathering on the frontiers of the empire - their threatened approaches toward the capital - and the formation of such vast armies as would produce universal consternation. A brief notice of these preparatory scenes, as adapted to produce the alarm referred to in the opening of the sixth seal, is all that will be necessary here; the more complete detail must be reserved for the explanation of the four trumpets of the seventh seal, when the work of destruction was consummated. These preparations and threatened invasions were events sufficiently important in their relation to the church, to what preceded, and to the future history of the world, to be symbolized here; and they are events in which all the particulars of the symbol may find a fulfillment. Anyone has only to took on a chart of history to see how appropriately this application of the symbol follows, if the previous explanations have been correct. In the illustration of this, in order to show the probability that these events are referred to by the symbols of the sixth seal, I would submit the following remarks:
(1) The time is what would be naturally suggested by this seal in its relation to the others. If the fifth referred to the persecutions under Diocletian - the last great persecution of the pagan powers in attempting to extinguish the Christian name - then we should naturally look for the fulfillment of the opening of the next in some event, or series of events, which would succeed that at no very distant interval, and that pertained to the empire or power that had been the prominent subject of the predictions in the previous seals. It would also be natural to look for some events that might be regarded as conveying an expression of the divine feeling in regard to that power, or that would present it in such an aspect that it would be seen that its power to persecute was at an end. This natural expectation would be answered either by some symbol that would refer to the complete triumph of the Christian system, or by such a series of judgments as would break the persecuting power itself in pieces. Now the threatened irruption of the northern barbarians followed the series of events already described with sufficient nearness to make it proper to regard that series of events as referred to.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 he events were of sufficient importance in the history of the empire to deserve this notice in the foreshadowing of what would occur. They were connected with the breaking up of that mighty power, and the complete change of the aspect of the world, in a political and religious point of view. A new order of things arose in the world’ s history. A new religion became established. New kingdoms from the fragments of the once-mighty Roman empire were founded, and the affairs of the world were put on a new footing. These mighty northern hordes not only spread consternation and alarm, as if the world were coming to an end, but they laid the foundations of kingdoms which continue to this day. In fact, few more important events have occurred in history.
\caps1 (3) t\caps0 his series of events was introduced in the manner described in the opening of the sixth seal. I have already said that it is not necessary to suppose, in the fulfillment of the symbol, that there would be a literal earthquake; but nothing in the symbol forbids us to suppose that there might be, and if there were we could not but consider it as remarkable. Now it so happens that the series of events pertaining to the Gothic invasions is introduced by Mr. Gibbon in the following language: "365 a.d. In the second year of the reign of Valentinian and Valens, on the morning of the twenty-first day of July, the greatest part of the Roman world was shaken by a violent and destructive earthquake. The impression was communicated to the waters; the shores of the Mediterranean were left dry by the sudden retreat of the sea; great quantities of fish were caught with the hand; large vessels were stranded on the mud; and a curious spectator amused his eye, or rather his fancy, by contemplating the various appearances of valleys and mountains which had never before, since the formation of the globe, been exposed to the sun. But the tide soon returned, with the weight of an immense and irresistible deluge, which was severely felt on the coasts of Sicily, of Dalmatia, of Greece, and of Egypt; large boats were transported, and lodged on the roofs of houses, or at the distance of two miles from the shore; the people, with their habitations, were swept away by the waters; and the city of Alexandria annually commemorated the day on which fifty thousand persons had lost their lives in the inundation.
This calamity, the report of which was magnified from one province to another, astonished and terrified the subjects of Rome; and their affrighted imagination enlarged the real extent of the momentary evil. They recollected the preceding earthquakes which had subverted the cities of Palestine and Bithynia; they considered these alarming strokes as the prelude only of still more dreadful calamities, and their fearful vanity was disposed to confound the symptoms of a declining empire and a sinking world,"vol. ii. pp. 115, 116. Mr. Gibbon then proceeds to detail the evils of war, as greatly surpassing the calamities produced by any natural causes, and adds (p. 116), "In the disastrous period of the fall of the Roman empire, which may be justly dated from the reign of Valens, the happiness and security of each individual was personally attacked; and the arts and labors of ages were rudely defaced by the barbarians of Scythia and Germany."He then proceeds with an exceedingly interesting description of the origin, the habits, and the movements of the Tartar nations, particularly the Huns, as they moved to the West, and precipitated the Gothic nations on the provinces of the Roman empire, until Rome itself was thrice besieged, was taken, and was sacked (ii. 116-266).
The earthquake referred to occurred in 365 a.d. The movements of the Huns from their territories in the neighborhood of China had commenced about 100 a.d., and in 375 a.d. they overcame the Goths lying along the Danube. The Goths, pressed and overcome by these savage invaders, asked permission of the Romans to cross the Danube, to find protection in the Roman empire, and to cultivate the waste lands of Thrace (Gibbon, ii. 129, 130). In the year 376 they were transported over the Danube, by the permission of the Roman emperor Valens; an event which, according to Mr. Gibbon, in its ultimate result, was the cause of the downfall of the empire; for they learned their own strength; they were attracted by the riches of the capital and the hope of reward, until they finally drew the Western emperor to Ravenna, sacked Rome, and took possession of Italy.
\caps1 (4) a\caps0 slight reference to the series of events in these periods of consternation and conquest may show more closely the nature of the alarms which would be caused by the prospect of these dreadful invasions, and may prepare us for a better understanding of the successive calamities which occurred under these invaders, when the empire fell, as described by the four first trumpets of the seventh seal. I shall copy from the tables of contents of Mr. Gibbon’ s history, under the twenty-sixth, thirtieth, and thirty-first chapters:
"ad | |
365 | Earthquakes. |
376 | The Huns and Goths. |
100 | The emigration of the Huns. |
375 | Their victories over the Goths. |
376 | The Goths implore the protection of Valens. |
376 | They are transported over the Danube into the Roman Empire. |
376 | They penetrate into Thrace. |
377 | Union of the Goths with Huns, Alani, etc. |
378 | Battle of Hadrianople. |
378 | The defeat of the Romans. |
383-395 | The settlement of the Goths in Thrace and Asia. |
395 | Revolt of the Goths. |
396 | Alaric marches into Greece. |
398 | Is proclaimed king of the Visigoths. |
400-403 | He invades Italy. |
406 | Radagaisus invades Italy. |
406 | Besieges Florence. |
406 | Threatens Rome. |
406 | The remainder of the Germans invade Gaul. |
407 | Desolation of Gaul. |
408 | Alaric marches to Rome. |
408 | First siege of Rome by the Goths. |
408 | Famine, plague, superstition. |
409 | Alaric accepts a ransom and raises the siege. |
409 | Fruitless negotiations for peace. |
409 | Second siege of Rome by the Goths. |
410 | Third siege and sack of Rome by the Goths. |
410 | Respect of the Goths for the Christian religion. |
410 | Pillage and fire of Rome. |
410 | Captives and fugitives. |
411-416 | Fall of the usurpers Jovinus, Sebastian, and Attalus. |
409 | Invasion of Spain by the Suevi, Vandals, Alani, etc. |
415-418 | The Goths conquer and restore Spain." |
As in other cases, also, rumour would increase their numbers and augment their ferocity. The sudden shock of an earthquake, the falling stars, the departing heavens, the removal of mountains and islands, and the consternation of kings and all classes of people, would be the appropriate emblems to represent these impending calamities. In confirmation of this, and as showing the effect produced by the approach of the Goths, and the dread of the Gothic arms, in causing universal consternation, the following extracts may be adduced from Mr. Gibbon, when describing the threatened invasion of Alaric, king of the Visigoths. He quotes from Claudian. "‘ Fame,’ says the poet,’ encircling with terror her gloomy wings, proclaimed the march of the barbarian army, and filled Italy with consternation.’ "Mr. Gibbon adds, "the apprehensions of each individual were increased in just proportion to the measure of his fortune; and the most timid, who had already embarked their valuable effects, meditated their escape to the island of Sicily, or to the African coast. The public distress was aggravated by the fears and reproaches of superstition. Every hour produced some horrid tale of strange and portentous accidents; the pagans deplored the neglect of omens and the interruption of sacrifices; but the Christians still derived some comfort from the powerful intercession of the saints and martyrs,"ii. 218, 219. See further illustrations in the notes on Rev 8:7-13.
Poole: Rev 6:12 - -- And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal the sixth of those seals with which the book was sealed, mentioned Rev 5:1 : this signifieth the revel...
And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal the sixth of those seals with which the book was sealed, mentioned Rev 5:1 : this signifieth the revelation of some things which should happen in some certain period of time, but what period is the question, as to which interpreters differ. Some think, the time when Jerusalem was taken; but this was a time past twenty-six or twenty-seven years before John was in Patmos, where he had this vision about things that shall be, Rev 1:1 22:6 . Some think, that period of time which shall be immediately before the day of judgment; but that guess seemeth worse, for after this there was a seventh seal to be opened. Some think, the period of the church’ s conflict with antichrist. But Mr. Mede’ s judgment (followed by many other famous men) seems best, that it denotes that period when Constantine, the first Christian emperor, restored peace to the church, by overturning the whole pagan state, and making Christianity the religion of the greatest part of the world. This was about the year 311, and perfected upon his victory over Licinius, 325. In this I acquiesce. Let us now see how what is said in this and the following verses about this period will agree to that time.
And, lo, there was a great earthquake: the great question is here, what is meant by this great earthquake, the darkening of the sun, the moon becoming as blood, &c. No history recording any such prodigies, hath made many (taking these things in the natural, literal sense) to say the period under the first seal signifies either the time when Jerusalem was taken, or the day of judgment; but there is a metaphorical sense of these expressions, very usual in the prophetical writings, to show great changes in states; and in this sense it is to be taken here. Thus the prophet describeth the great change God would make in Jerusalem, Isa 29:6 , Thou shalt be visited of the Lord of hosts with thunder, and with earthquake, and great noise, with storm and tempest, and the flame of devouring fire: and Jer 15:9 , Her sun is gone down whlie it was yet day. And, Eze 32:7 , the change God would work in the ruin of Egypt, is thus expressed: When I shall put thee out, I will cover the heaven, and make the stars thereof dark; and the moon shall not give her light. All the bright lights of heaven will I make dark over thee. So Joe 2:10,31 , and Joe 3:15 . What is an earthquake, but the shaking of the earth? And under this notion God expresseth the changes he makes in states and kingdoms, Isa 2:19,21 24:18 Hag 2:6,7 . Thus by
earthquake here is to be understood a great change in the Roman empire.
And the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood: the sun signifies those that are in the highest power; the moon, those that are next to them in place and dignity.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Rev 6:13 - -- This is but another phrase signifying a great change: the whole verse is much the same with Isa 34:4 . Literally these things were never yet fulfill...
This is but another phrase signifying a great change: the whole verse is much the same with Isa 34:4 . Literally these things were never yet fulfilled. It is a phrase signifying the fall of great and mighty men.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Rev 6:14 - -- Two expressions more signifying the same thing. The first is used by the prophet, to signify the change God would make in the state of the Edomites,...
Two expressions more signifying the same thing. The first is used by the prophet, to signify the change God would make in the state of the Edomites, Isa 34:4 , as will appear by comparing what that prophet saith, with what Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Obadiah say, upon the same argument, Jer 49:7-22 Eze 35:1-15 .
And every mountain and island were moved out of their places all sorts of people shall be destroyed, or all the paganish religion shall be rooted out.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Rev 6:15 - -- A terror shall fall upon all sorts of men, high and low; and, like men affrighted, they shall seek for themselves hiding places, where they can thin...
A terror shall fall upon all sorts of men, high and low; and, like men affrighted, they shall seek for themselves hiding places, where they can think themselves most secure: see Isa 2:19 .
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Rev 6:16 - -- And said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us: see Hos 10:8 Luk 23:30 . They shall be in a great consternation, and be ready to take a...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Rev 6:17 - -- For this judgment that is upon us, is the effect of his wrath for our abusing and persecuting his members; and we, with all our courage, might, and ...
For this judgment that is upon us, is the effect of his wrath for our abusing and persecuting his members; and we, with all our courage, might, and power, are not able to abide his wrath. These words import, that in this great change, as the greatest persons should be at a loss what to do, so they should perish under a conviction that the great vengeance of God was come upon them for their opposing the gospel, and provoking Christ by persecuting of his members.
There are other more particular explications of the sun, moon, stars, heavens, & c., but they all centre in this general, that here is prophesied a great and universal change of the religion of the world, which should strike a great terror into the pagan rulers, and issue in the overturning of all their altars and temples, and the ruin of the great men, relating either to their civil or ecclesiastical state; and that they at last should know that, God was God, and that these judgments came upon them for their opposition to Christ. And (which addeth strength to this interpretation) Mr. Durham hath observed, that no so short period of time hath produced so many remarkable judgments, and extorted so many ingenuous confessions from enemies, that what came upon them was for their persecutions; and a catalogue of which may be found in Mr. Mede, and in Mr. Durham. Mr. Mede reckoneth Galerius, Maximinus, and Licinius. Galerius was eaten up of worms, being before he died sensible of his guilt, ceasing from his persecution, and begging the Christians’ prayers. Maximinus, another Roman emperor, (or partner in the empire with the former), being beaten by Licinius, fled to Tarsus, and there fell upon his pagan priests, who had deceived him by their lying oracles, and made a decree for the Christians’ liberty; but God would not suffer so bloodly a wretch to die after the ordinary death of man; he died miserably through intolerable pain, his eyes dropping out of his head. Licinius was a Christian, and joined a while with Constantine, but apostatized, was overcome in two battles, taken, and by him put to death. All these three were within the space of eighteen years. Mr. Durham to these adds the instances of Dioclesian and Maximinian, little above twenty years before, in the heat of their persecution making a stop, and through a horror of conscience laying down their imperial dignity; and Maxentius, drowned in the river Tiber; and he says Licinius, before mentioned, before he died, revenged himself upon his idolatrous priests that had persuaded him to forsake Constantine’ s God. The change was so great in the empire, upon Constantine the Great’ s coming to the throne, by the death of some great persons, turning others out of place, destroying the whole frame and practice of the pagans’ religion, that it might well be expressed by earthquakes, the sun turning black, the moon as blood, the stars falling from heaven to earth, the heavens departing like a scroll, and the removal of islands and mountains, and by the consternation it would bring all the pagan great men into, &c. And this time, which was a period of about twenty-five or twenty-seven years, is thought to be understood to be the time predicted upon the opening of the sixth seal. Thus we see the dragon’ s reign at an end in about three hundred and eleven or three hundred and twenty-five years after Christ; the empire, as pagan, persecuting the church of Christ, and following it with ten successive persecutions, quite overturned, and a Christian emperor, Constantine the Great, ruling it. But we must understand these great things were not perfected in a few months; some relics of paganism remained; for though Constantine shut up the pagan temples, yet all the idols in them were not destroyed until the time of Theodosius, who began to rule in the empire Anno 379, and reigned sixteen years. Between Constantine and him were Constantius and Constans, Julian the Apostate, and Jovianus, Valentinianus, Valens, and Gratian; during some of whose reigns (Julian’ s especially) the Christians suffered much both from pagans and Arians, so that the Christians had not a full and perfect quiet till after the year 390.
PBC: Rev 6:12 - -- Re 6:12-13 And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and t...
Re 6:12-13 And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood; And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind.
We will discuss these verses together because of their closeness in accomplishment.
The sixth seal was opened and " there was a great earthquake, the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood." We must remember this was written in figurative language. Titus had broken through the third wall[1] and was even now in the innermost part of the temple area. Fire had been set to the gates of the temple area. The fire burned so fiercely that the Holy of holies was set on fire. The clamor of the fighting was so great that the whole earth shook under their feet. The smoke was so thick that nothing could be seen. History records that men did not know whether they were fighting the enemy or those in their own ranks. Have you ever looked at the sun or moon through a smoked glass? This seems to be the conditions described here.
" And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig tree casteth[2] her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind."
Daniel uses the word stars as meaning people, (Speaking of the great he Goat) " And it waxed great, even to the host of heaven; and it cast down some of the host and of the stars to the ground, and stamped upon them." {Da 8:10} The Hebrew word used in this passage for stars was kowkab, ko-kawb’; [ this was used] fig. a prince:—star ([- gazer]). We have already mentioned the great slaughter which went on throughout the city. Bodies were strewn in every passage until it was impossible to walk without stepping on them.
Let us now examine the useage of the word star in the Scriptural meaning which may be more clear. The same word kowkab is used in Joe 2:10, " The earth shall quake before them; the heavens shall tremble: the sun and the moon shall be dark, and the stars shall withdraw their shining." The word kowkab is used to refer to falling dignitaries in Joe 3:15; Ob 1:4.
New Testament language most often translates the word aster, as-tare’as the same word stars used in the text of Re 6:13. The only exceptions are when it refers to the stars overhead such as, " Therefore sprang there even of one, and him as good as dead, so many as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the sea shore innumerable." {Heb 11:12} This passage uses the word astron, as’-tron; prop. a constellation; put for a single star (nat. or artificial):—star. Jesus’ own words give us further evidence that the word stars refers to the falling dignitaries, " The mystery of the seven stars which thou sawest in my right hand, and the seven golden candlesticks. The seven stars are the angels of the seven churches." {Re 1:20} It stands without controversy that the seven stars, are the seven angels, which are the pastors, or elders, (men) of the seven churches of Asia.
The meaning in the text seems clear. Especially when we hear what history says about those who had escaped to this part of the temple. Children, old men, and profane persons, and priests [stars] were all slain in the same manner. Their bodies were strewn over the ground as the stars are strewn over the sky.— Eld. Charles Taylor
[1] Chapter V, page 823. of Josephus " War of the Jews." ." .. When they saw the fire of the holy house, they exerted their utmost strength, and brake out into groans and outcries again: Perea [mountain near Jerusalem] did also return the echo, as well as the mountains round about [the city], and augmented the force of the entire noise."
[2] ballo, a primary verb; to throw (in various applications, more or less violent or intense): arise, cast ( out), X dung, lay, lie, pour, put (up), send, strike, throw ( down), thrust.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
PBC: Rev 6:14 - -- The following passages from the history of Josephus, Book VI, Chapter IX, Section 5 best illustrates the fulfillment of these verses; After the Jews h...
The following passages from the history of Josephus, Book VI, Chapter IX, Section 5 best illustrates the fulfillment of these verses; After the Jews had been ejected from the towers [Josephus states] ." .. by God Himself, and fled immediately to that valley which is under Siloam, where they again recovered themselves out of the dread they were in for a while, and ran violently against that part of the Roman wall which lay on that side; but as their courage was too much depressed to make their attacks with sufficient force, and their power was now broken with fear and affliction, they were repulsed by the guards, and dispersing themselves at distances from each other, went down into the subterranean caverns." I believe that although they did not realize this to be the wrath of God and the Lamb, they fulfilled the Scripture in a figure. They fled to the caves to cover them from the oppressor whom God had sent for their destruction.— Eld. Charles Taylor
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
PBC: Rev 6:17 - -- The language of these verses is highly figurative. I do not intend to imply that they only have meaning for that particular time. History seems to rep...
The language of these verses is highly figurative. I do not intend to imply that they only have meaning for that particular time. History seems to repeat itself because man never learns from the past. However, this was a day when the wrath of God and of the Lamb was upon the Jewish world. They had acted so wickedly and had falsely proclaimed the meaning of prophecy until their people had come into judgment.
Mt 24:3 gives an account of Jesus as He sat upon the mount of Olives, ." .. the disciples came unto him privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?" Jesus told them to take heed that no man deceive you. There would be many who would come in His name proclaiming to be Christ. " And ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes in divers places. All these are the beginning of sorrows. Then shall they deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall kill you: and ye shall be hated of all nations for my name’s sake. And then shall many be offended, and shall betray one another, and shall hate one another. And many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many. And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold. But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved. And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come." {Mt 24:6-14}
The fulfillment of may be clearly seen in the trials of the early church, and possibly in the opening of the second and third seals of Re 6:3-6. The book of Acts gives us a great testimony of what the disciples suffered. In fact, we are told that, except John, none of the original ones who followed Jesus were still alive at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem. There were others, however, who were willing to suffer at the hands of the enemies of Christ rather than deny His name. History can only confirm things which God has already proclaimed. John was given this message of the Revelation of Jesus Christ before the great catastrophe came upon the Temple of the Jews and the city of Jerusalem. Instead of history proving the Bible to be true- the Bible proves history to be that which God had already proclaimed.— Eld. Charles Taylor
Haydock: Rev 6:12 - -- At the opening of the sixth seal....a great earthquake, &c. Many think that these dreadful signs, of the sun turning black, &c. are not to happen t...
At the opening of the sixth seal....a great earthquake, &c. Many think that these dreadful signs, of the sun turning black, &c. are not to happen till the time of antichrist, a little before the end of the world. See Matthew xiv.; Luke xxi.; Isaias xiii. and xxxiv.; Ezechiel xxxiii.; Daniel xii.; &c. Others apply these prodigies to God's visible chastisements, on the heathen emperors and persecutors of the Christians, before the first Christian emperor Constantine. (Witham) ---
And I saw. The sixth seal being opened, St. John sees painted before him the severe and terrible manner in which the Almighty would revenge himself on his enemies. It may refer either to the time of Constantine, when we behold the Christian religion triumphing on the ruins of paganism, and after his death, and that of his sons, the empire of Rome given up a prey to barbarians, Rome itself taken and pillaged, and all the provinces thrown into dreadful disorder and consternation; or it may likewise refer to the day of general judgment, when the Almighty will make sinners drink the wine of his indignation, in presence of all the just; of which dreadful time of vengeance all other particular judgments are only imperfect figures. (Victorin; Ven. Bede; Tichon) ---
St. John, in imitation of the ancient prophets, makes use of the earthquake, &c. hyperbolically, to mark more strongly the dreadful and horrible evils with which the Roman empire, and its persecuting emperors, we to be overwhelmed. Rome itself was filled with wars and seditions, both at home and abroad. The emperors were all destroyed by the Almighty in a most singular manner; witness Maxentius, who was thrown headlong into the Tiber; Maximin Jovius, who, under a horrible and incurable disease, owned the hand of the Almighty afflicting him; Maximin Daia, who, being overcome in battle, fled away in disguise, and at last, seized with a strange disease, his bowels were all consumed, he lost his eyes, and died reduced to a mere skeleton. Witness likewise Licinius, who, being engaged with Constantine, was always beaten, and at length strangled. Maximian also, the rival of Constantine, who strangled himself in Marseilles, where he had been confined. (Calmet)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Rev 6:14 - -- And every mountain. In the dreadful confusion of the Roman empire, in the time of Constantine, so great was the revolution, that mountains appeared,...
And every mountain. In the dreadful confusion of the Roman empire, in the time of Constantine, so great was the revolution, that mountains appeared, as it were, moved out of their places; islands shifted from their accustomed situations. We behold at one time seven persons, Maximin Galerius, Maxentius, Severus Cæsar, Maximin, Alexander, Maximin Hercules, and Licinius, all aiming at the empire. The first six perished in nine years, from 305 to 314: Licinius was strangled in 324. All these were enemies of the Christian religion. Constantine, who supported it, remained sole master of the empire. (Calmet)
====================
Gill: Rev 6:12 - -- And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal,.... Of the sealed book which the Lamb took out of the hand of him that sat upon the throne, in order t...
And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal,.... Of the sealed book which the Lamb took out of the hand of him that sat upon the throne, in order to open it, and unloose its seals. About this seal interpreters much differ; some refer this to the destruction of Jerusalem, because of the likeness of expressions here used, and in Mat 24:7; but this was past many years before this seal was opened; and besides, though that time was a day of wrath to the uttermost upon the Jewish people, and it was the Lamb's day of wrath, taking vengeance on them for their unbelief and rejection of him as the Messiah; yet they had no sense of the Lamb, nor any apprehension of his wrath at that time, nor have they now, but imputed their calamity to their divisions and quarrels among themselves. Others think this seal belongs to the destruction of the Roman empire by the Goths, Huns, Vandals, &c. but it should be observed, that the empire stood some hundreds of years after the end of the fifth seal and the opening of this; and it was after the seventh seal, and at the sounding of the trumpets, that that destruction came on; moreover, that calamity was by the savageness of some barbarous nations which overrun the empire, but this here spoken of comes from the wrath of the Lamb; add to which, that that calamity distressed the Christians in the empire, and them chiefly, whereas this falls only upon the enemies of the Lamb, and the persecutors of his people. Others are of opinion that this has respect to the strange change of affairs in the church of Christ, through the rise, power, and tyranny of antichrist; by "the earthquake" they suppose is meant the shaking of both church and state by the man of sin; who shook the doctrines, ordinances, and discipline of the church, and threw all into confusion, and introduced a new face of things; and also shook the kingdoms of the earth, and the thrones and crowns of princes: by the "sun" becoming "black", they think is meant the sun of righteousness, Jesus Christ, who was obscured in the doctrines concerning him, as the one and only Mediator, and justification by his righteousness, and pardon through his blood, by introducing the mediation of angels and saints, the doctrine of justification by works, and the doctrine of merit, works of supererogation, indulgences, pardons, penance, and purgatory: by the "moon" they understand the church, which receives all its light, grace, righteousness, and holiness, from Christ, and which, like the moon, is changeable as to its outward form and circumstances; and this became "as blood", through the persecutions, massacres, and cruelties of the Romish antichrist, who has been made drunk with the blood of the saints and martyrs of Jesus: the "stars" they take to be the ministers of the word; either hypocritical ones, who were like unripe figs, destitute of true grace, and so were easily shaken with the wind of Papal power, and fell into the earth, and apostatized from the faith, and conformed to the corruptions of antichrist; or the true ministers of the Gospel, who were put to death, and that to an untimely and violent one, signified by the shaking of untimely figs by a mighty wind: by the "heaven" departing as a scroll rolled up, they suppose is designed either the church, which fled into the wilderness, and remained invisible during the Papal power and cruelty; or else the Scriptures, which the pope made himself sole judge and interpreter of and shut up from the common people in an unknown language, and forbid the laity the reading of them: by "mountains" they think are intended the kings and princes of the earth, who were obliged to submit to the Romish antichrist, and give their kingdoms to him, and receive their crowns and kingdoms from him, and be his vassals: and by "the islands", the people their subjects, who were forced to acknowledge him as the supreme head, and receive his mark in their right hand or forehead, or they could not buy and sell: and by all ranks and degrees of men, as "kings", &c. hiding themselves in rocks and mountains, and calling upon them to fall on them and cover them, they apply either to their invoking the virgin Mary, and other saints, to intercede for them, and screen them from the wrath of God and Christ, on account of their sins; or else to the persecutors of the saints, of every rank and in every age, and to the punishments that shall fall upon them. But however feasible this interpretation may seem to be, it is certain that this was not the face of things at the close of the fifth seal, or the Dioclesian persecution, and at the opening of the sixth, when Constantine came to the imperial throne, for then the church appeared as she is described in Rev 12:1; which is just the reverse of this. There are others, who because of the very awful things here spoken of, and the very awful language in which they are expressed, conclude that this seal respects the day of judgment; not considering that the fifth seal ends about the year 313, at the close of the last of the ten persecutions, and that the sixth seal begins where that ends; and though above 1750 years have elapsed since that time, yet the day of judgment is not come, and we know not when it will; besides, here is another seal, a seventh seal, which follows, and introduces punishments on the Roman empire, and seven vials follow, which pour out plagues upon antichrist, all which can never be thought to be after the day of judgment; moreover, the account of the day of judgment stands in its proper place in Rev 20:12; after the destruction of Babylon, the first resurrection, and the saints' thousand years' reign with Christ. But to proceed; the business which is the subject of this seal is the removing of Paganism, and Pagan governors out of the Roman empire; this was the thing the rider upon the white horse, under the first seal, set out upon to effect, and never ceased until he had accomplished it; and this is what ensued upon the close of the fifth seal, when Pagan persecution ceased, on Constantine, a Christian emperor, having the reins of power in his hands; and it cannot be thought, that so wonderful a change of things as this should be omitted in this prophetic history; and it is easy to observe that changes in kingdoms and governments, both as to the polity and religion of them, are sometimes expressed in such like figurative terms as here; see Isa 13:9; and which may be accommodated to this event as follows:
and, lo, there was a great earthquake; or "shaking", both of the heavens and earth, and which, as it denotes in Hag 2:6; compared with Heb 12:26; the removing of Jewish worship and ordinances, in order to make way for the Christian ordinances and institutions, which were to remain; so here it intends the removing of Pagan worship and idolatry, and of Pagan magistrates, that the Christian religion and Christian magistrates might take place. This, with what follows, concerning the darkness of the sun and moon, might be literally true; and it seems by historians, that there were such phenomena about those times; for it is asserted h, that a very great earthquake in Syria followed the Dioclesian persecution, which shook and caused to fall the tops of houses at Tyre and Sidon, and killed many thousands; and some such like happened at Rome, and at Spoletum, where above three hundred and fifty Pagans perished, as they were serving their idols. It is also observed i, that the moon was turned into blood in the times of Galerius, who succeeded. Dioclesian; and that the sun failed, and the stars shined for four hours, when Licinius was conquered by Constantine; but then these may be considered as symbols of the change in the empire.
And the sun came black as sackcloth of hair; which is made of black hairs; see Isa 50:3; as when eclipsed. The sun was the chief deity worshipped by the Heathens, under various names, and this becoming black, may design the removing of their principal gods from their honour and glory, or the downfall of idolatry, which the Jews k call
And the moon became as blood; as when obscured; the Alexandrian copy and some others, the Complutensian edition, the Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions, read, "the whole moon"; this may design the next Heathen deity, or class of deities, for the moon was also worshipped by the Heathens under different names; and may likewise include the Pagan priesthood, which was next, and was annexed to the imperial dignity; and which was disused by, Constantine and his successors; and even the very title, and the robe which was a symbol of it, were laid aside as unworthy of Christian princes; see Mede upon the place.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Rev 6:13 - -- And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth,.... All the other inferior deities lost their esteem, worship, and honour; for the idol temples being now...
And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth,.... All the other inferior deities lost their esteem, worship, and honour; for the idol temples being now opened, the idols and statues were exposed to the common people, and were found to be stuffed with hay and straw, which brought them into great contempt l. Moreover, as stars sometimes signify the ministers of the Gospel in the Christian church, Rev 1:20, and sometimes the priests in the Jewish church, Dan 8:10; so they may here likewise include the idolatrous priests among the Heathens, who were discharged and removed by Constantine, and had their posts and profits taken away from them; yea, Maximinus, an Heathen emperor, or tyrant, being beaten by Licinius, who was then Constantine's colleague, killed many of the priests and prophets of his gods, which were formerly had in great admiration by him, as deceivers and betrayers of him, by whose oracles he was animated to the war m. And in like manner Licinius put to death the priests and prophets of the new idol at Antioch n.
Even as a fig tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind; which figs being young and green, and not fixed, fall off easily, and in great numbers, when a blustering wind beats upon them; and so the rabble of Pagan deities, and idolatrous priests, were easily, and in great numbers, removed through the power of Constantine, which carried all before it.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Rev 6:14 - -- And the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled together,.... The manner of writing formerly was on rolls of parchment; hence the word volume is...
And the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled together,.... The manner of writing formerly was on rolls of parchment; hence the word volume is used for a book, which, when rolled up, the writing within could not be seen, not a syllable nor letter of it. In like manner the Roman empire, as Pagan, which was like a large sheet, or rather like the expanse or firmament of the heaven, stretched out over all the earth, was now, as to the Paganism of it, rolled up together, so that there were no more Heathen gods, nor Heathen priests; no more idolatry, and idolatrous worship of that kind were to be seen, and not so much as the names of Heathen gods to be heard of in the empire.
And every mountain and island were moved out of their places; by "every mountain" may be meant the places of idolatrous worship, which were usually upon mountains; see Jer 3:6; which were now shut up, or demolished, or used for Christian worship; and "every island" being moved also may show, that Paganism was not only rooted out of the provinces of the empire upon the continent, but out of the islands also; and the ecclesiastical history of these times informs us, that there were Christian churches in the isles, which enjoyed the Gospel free of persecution and distress; as in the isles of Cyprus, Crete, the Cyclades, Sardinia, Siciiy, Corsica, and in ours of England, Scotland, and Ireland o. Mr. Daubuz thinks, that as "mountains" design the temples of idols, "islands" signify the revenues of them, which were now taken away, and applied to other uses.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Rev 6:15 - -- And the king's of the earth, and the great men,.... The Roman emperors, and other principal magistrates, governors of provinces and cities:
and the...
And the king's of the earth, and the great men,.... The Roman emperors, and other principal magistrates, governors of provinces and cities:
and the rich men; among the commonalty; these three may design perhaps more particularly the emperors, nobles, and senate of Rome: and
the chief captains; or captains of thousands, that had the command of the Roman legions
and the mighty men; the soldiers that were under them, men of strength, courage, and valour;
and every bondman, and every freeman; which takes in all the inhabitants of the Roman empire, of every state and condition, and which was an usual distinction among the Romans: these
hid themselves in the dens, and in the rocks of the mountains; where, through their cruel persecutions, they had forced multitudes of Christians to flee, and therefore, "lex talionis", the law of retaliation was righteously inflicted on them; and not to take notice of any other, this was remarkably true of their kings or emperors Dioclesian and Herculius Maximianus, who were emperors together, in the height of their imperial glory and grandeur, the one being at Nicomedia, and the other at Milan, did, on one and the same day, of their own accord, abdicate the empire, and divested themselves of their imperial crown and government, and retired to a private life; pretending in public, that old age, and the weight of business, were the cause, but to their friends they owned, that it was through despair, because they could not extinguish the Christian religion p. Some ascribed this to frenzy and madness q; but the true reason was, that the wrath of the Lamb was let into their consciences, and which they could not bear, and which obliged them to take this step, to the amazement of the whole world. Maximinus, who succeeded them, being overcome by Licinius, laid aside his imperial habit, and hid himself among the common people, and skulked about in fields and villages r. Maxentius, another emperor, fled from Constantine, the instrument of the wrath of the Lamb, and the pouring it out upon his enemies, and fell into the river Tiber, from the Mylvian bridge, where he perished; and which was the very place in which he had laid snares for Constantine s.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Rev 6:16 - -- And said to the mountains and rocks, fall on us,.... They chose death rather than life. Dioclesian being invited by Constantine to a marriage feast, e...
And said to the mountains and rocks, fall on us,.... They chose death rather than life. Dioclesian being invited by Constantine to a marriage feast, excused himself by reason of his old age; but receiving threatening letters, the historian t says, in which he was charged with having favoured Maxentius, and with favouring Maximinus, he poisoned himself; and others of the emperors are said to lay violent hands upon themselves:
and hide us from the face of him that sitteth upon the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb; thus they owned the proper deity, and almighty power of God, and Christ, which they dreaded; so Maximinus being afflicted with a most horrible disease, of which he died, asked pardon of the God of the Christians, and owned that he suffered justly, for his reproaches of Christ u Licinius, who sometimes pretended to be a Christian, and joined with Constantine, but afterwards revolted and fought against him, being conquered and taken, was put to death; at which time he, and they that suffered death with him, confessed that the God of Constantine was the only true God w. This passage shows, that Christ, God's firstborn, is higher than the kings of the earth; yea, that he is equal with him that sits upon the throne, with God his Father, since his wrath is equally dreaded as his; and that, though he is a Lamb, mild, meek, and gentle, yet there is wrath, fury, and indignation in him, against his enemies, which is very dreadful and intolerable; see Psa 2:12.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Rev 6:17 - -- For the great day of his wrath is come,.... The Vulgate Latin and Syriac versions read, "of their wrath"; both of him that sits upon the throne, and o...
For the great day of his wrath is come,.... The Vulgate Latin and Syriac versions read, "of their wrath"; both of him that sits upon the throne, and of the Lamb, against the Heathen gods and Heathen persecutors, in answer to the cry of the martyrs in Rev 6:9.
And who shall be able to stand? against either of them, or in their presence, and so as to bear their wrath and displeasure; all which expresses guilt, shame, fear, and despair.
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Rev 6:12 Grk “like blood,” understanding αἷμα (aima) as a blood-red color rather than actual blood (L&N 8.64).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Rev 6:16 It is difficult to say where this quotation ends. The translation ends it after “withstand it” at the end of v. 17, but it is possible tha...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Rev 6:17 The translation “to withstand (it)” for ἵστημι (Jisthmi) is based on the imagery of holding one’s gro...
Geneva Bible: Rev 6:12 ( 9 ) And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as ( c ) sackcloth of hair, and ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Rev 6:15 ( 10 ) And the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men, and every bondman, and every free ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Rev 6:16 And said to the mountains and rocks, ( 11 ) Fall on us, and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb:
...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Rev 6:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Rev 6:1-17 - --1 The opening of the seals in order, and what followed thereupon, containing a prophecy to the end of the world.
MHCC -> Rev 6:12-17
MHCC: Rev 6:12-17 - --When the sixth seal was opened, there was a great earthquake. The foundations of churches and states would be terribly shaken. Such bold figurative de...
Matthew Henry -> Rev 6:9-17
Matthew Henry: Rev 6:9-17 - -- In the remaining part of this chapter we have the opening of the fifth and the sixth seals. I. The fifth seal. Here is no mention made of any one wh...
Barclay -> Rev 6:12-14; Rev 6:15-17
Barclay: Rev 6:12-14 - --John is using pictures very familiar to his Jewish readers. The Jews always regarded the end as a time when the earth would be shattered and there wo...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barclay: Rev 6:15-17 - --As John saw it in his vision, the end time was to be one of universal terror. Here again he is working with pictures familiar to all who knew the Ol...
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...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Rev 6:1-17 - --B. The first six seal judgments ch. 6
John received revelation concerning the j...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Rev 6:12-17 - --6. The sixth seal 6:12-17
The scene now shifts back to earth.
"The entire passage in every clause utilizes well known prophetic anticipations of the d...
College -> Rev 6:1-17
College: Rev 6:1-17 - --REVELATION 6
B. THE FIRST VISION OF THE FUTURE (6:1-8:1)
In our study of Revelation 4-5, we saw that the "scroll with writing on both sides and seal...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Other
Critics Ask -> Rev 6:16
Critics Ask: Rev 6:16 REVELATION 6:16 —Is Christ merciful or wrathful? PROBLEM: Throughout the Gospels Christ is presented as merciful, healing the sick, blessing th...
Evidence: Rev 6:15 Note the truth of Pro 11:4 : " Riches profit not in the day of wrath: but righteousness delivers from death." Those who are unrighteous—no matter...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)