REVELATIO 8 COMMETARY EDITED BY GLE PEASE 1 When he opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven for about half an hour. BARES, “And when he had opened the seventh seal - See the notes on Rev_5:1 . There was silence in heaven - The whole scene of the vision is laid in heaven Rev_4:1-11 , and John represents things as they seem to be passing there. The meaning here is, that on the opening of this seal, instead of voices, thunderings, tempests, as perhaps was expected from the character of the sixth seal (Rev_6:12 ff), and which seemed only to have been suspended for a time Rev. 7, there was an awful stillness, as if all heaven was reverently waiting for the development. Of course this is a symbolical representation, and is designed not to represent a pause in the events themselves, but only the impressive and fearful nature of the events which are now to be disclosed. About the space of half an hour - He did not profess to designate the time exactly. It was a brief period - yet a period which in such circumstances would appear to be long - about half an hour. The word used here - μιώριον hēmiōrion - does not occur elsewhere in the New Testament. It is correctly rendered “half an hour”; and, since the day was divided into twelve parts from the rising to the setting of the sun, the time designated would not vary much from half an hour with us. Of course, therefore, this denotes a brief period. In a state, however, of anxious suspense, the moments would seem to move slowly; and to see the exact force of this, we are to reflect on the scenes represented - the successive opening of seals disclosing most important events - increasing in interest as each new one was opened; the course of events which seemed to be leading to the consummation of all things, arrested after the opening of the sixth seal; and now the last in the series to be opened, disclosing what the affairs of the world would be at the consummation of all things. John looks on this; and in this state of suspense the half hour may have seemed an age. We are not, of course, to suppose that the silence in heaven is produced by the character of the events which are now to follow - for they are as yet unknown. It is caused by what, from the nature of the previous disclosures, was naturally apprehended, and by the fact that this is the last of the series - the finishing of the mysterious volume. This seems to me to be the obvious interpretation of this passage, though there has been here, as in other parts of the Book of Revelation, a great variety of opinion as to the meaning. Those who suppose that the whole book consists of a triple series of visions designed to prefigure future events, parallel with each other, and each leading to the consummation of all things - the series embracing the seals, the trumpets, and the vials, each seven in
Transcript
1. REVELATIO 8 COMME TARY EDITED BY GLE PEASE 1 When he opened
the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven for about half an
hour. BAR ES, And when he had opened the seventh seal - See the
notes on Rev_5:1. There was silence in heaven - The whole scene of
the vision is laid in heaven Rev_4:1-11, and John represents things
as they seem to be passing there. The meaning here is, that on the
opening of this seal, instead of voices, thunderings, tempests, as
perhaps was expected from the character of the sixth seal (Rev_6:12
ff), and which seemed only to have been suspended for a time Rev.
7, there was an awful stillness, as if all heaven was reverently
waiting for the development. Of course this is a symbolical
representation, and is designed not to represent a pause in the
events themselves, but only the impressive and fearful nature of
the events which are now to be disclosed. About the space of half
an hour - He did not profess to designate the time exactly. It was
a brief period - yet a period which in such circumstances would
appear to be long - about half an hour. The word used here -
hmirion - does not occur elsewhere in the New Testament. It is
correctly rendered half an hour; and, since the day was divided
into twelve parts from the rising to the setting of the sun, the
time designated would not vary much from half an hour with us. Of
course, therefore, this denotes a brief period. In a state,
however, of anxious suspense, the moments would seem to move
slowly; and to see the exact force of this, we are to reflect on
the scenes represented - the successive opening of seals disclosing
most important events - increasing in interest as each new one was
opened; the course of events which seemed to be leading to the
consummation of all things, arrested after the opening of the sixth
seal; and now the last in the series to be opened, disclosing what
the affairs of the world would be at the consummation of all
things. John looks on this; and in this state of suspense the half
hour may have seemed an age. We are not, of course, to suppose that
the silence in heaven is produced by the character of the events
which are now to follow - for they are as yet unknown. It is caused
by what, from the nature of the previous disclosures, was naturally
apprehended, and by the fact that this is the last of the series -
the finishing of the mysterious volume. This seems to me to be the
obvious interpretation of this passage, though there has been here,
as in other parts of the Book of Revelation, a great variety of
opinion as to the meaning. Those who suppose that the whole book
consists of a triple series of visions designed to prefigure future
events, parallel with each other, and each leading to the
consummation of all things - the series embracing the seals, the
trumpets, and the vials, each seven in
2. number - regard this as the proper ending of the first of
this series, and suppose that we have on the opening of the seventh
seal the beginning of a new symbolical representation, going over
the same ground, under the representations of the trumpets, in a
new aspect or point of view. Eichorn and Rosenmuller suppose that
the silence introduced by the apostle is merely for effect, and
that, therefore, it is without any special signification. Grotius
applies the whole representation to the destruction of Jerusalem,
and supposes that the silence in heaven refers to the restraining
of the winds referred to in Rev_7:1 - the wrath in respect to the
city, which was now suspended for a short time. Prof. Stuart also
refers it to the destruction of Jerusalem, and supposes that the
seven trumpets refer to seven gradations in the series of judgments
that were coming upon the persecutors of the church. Mr. Daubuz
regards the silence here referred to as a symbol of the liberty
granted to the church in the time of Constantine; Vitringa
interprets it of the peace of the millennium which is to succeed
the overthrow of the beast and the false prophet; Dr. Woodhouse and
Mr. Cunninghame regard it as the termination of the series of
events which thee former seals denote, and the commencement of a
new train of revelations; Mr. Elliott, as the suspension of the
winds during the sealing of the servants of God; Mr. Lord, as the
period of repose which intervened between the close of the
persecution by Diocletian and Galerius, in 311, and the
commencement, near the close of that year, of the civil wars by
which Constantine the Great was elevated to the imperial throne. It
will be seen at once how arbitrary and unsatisfactory most of those
interpretations are, and how far from harmony expositors have been
as to the meaning of this symbol. The most simple and obvious
interpretation is likely to be the true one; and that is, as above
suggested, that it refers to silence in heaven as expressive of the
fearful anticipation felt on opening the last seal that was to
close the series, and to wind up the affairs of the church and the
world. Nothing would be more natural than such a state of solemn
awe on such an occasion; nothing would introduce the opening of the
seal in a more impressive manner; nothing would more naturally
express the anxiety of the church, the probable feelings of the
pious on the opening of these successive seals, than the
representation that incense, accompanied with their prayers, was
continually offered in heaven. CLARKE, The seventh seal - This is
ushered in and opened only by the Lamb. Silence in heaven - This
must be a mere metaphor, silence being put here for the deep and
solemn expectation of the stupendous things about to take place,
which the opening of this seal had produced. When any thing
prodigious or surprising is expected, all is silence, and even the
breath is scarcely heard to be drawn. Half an hour - As heaven may
signify the place in which all these representations were made to
St. John, the half hour may be considered as the time during which
no representation was made to him, the time in which God was
preparing the august exhibition which follows. There is here, and
in the following verses, a strong allusion to different parts of
the temple worship; a presumption that the temple was still
standing, and the regular service of God carried on. The silence
here refers to this fact - while the priest went in to burn incense
in the holy place, all the people continued in silent mental prayer
without till the priest returned. See Luk_1:10. The angel mentioned
here appears to execute the office of priest, as we shall by and by
see.
3. GILL, And when he had opened the seventh seal,.... That is,
when the Lamb had opened the seventh and last seal of the scaled
book: there was silence in heaven about the space of half an hour;
not in the third heaven, the seat of the divine Being, of angels
and glorified saints, where are hallelujahs without intermission;
but in the church, which is oftentimes signified by heaven in this
book, and where now the throne of God was placed, in that form as
described in Rev_4:4, or rather in the Roman empire: nor is this
silence the sum of this seal, or the only thing in it; for it
includes the preparation of the seven angels to take their
trumpets, though none of them were sounded during this period. This
space of time some think refers to the time which elapsed, while
the angel, who had incense given him to offer it with the prayers
of saints, did so, and took fire off the altar with his censer, and
cast it on the earth: and while the seven angels had their trumpets
given them, and they were preparing to sound. Others are of opinion
that this was only a pause, a breathing time for John between the
former visions and seals, and the following; nothing being said or
done, or anything exhibited to him during this interval; but he was
at leisure to reflect on what he had seen, and to prepare for what
was to come. Others understand it of the amazement of the saints at
the judgments of God, which were coming upon the Christian empire,
and of their quiet and silent preparations for these troubles and
combats, both within and without, they were to be exercised with;
see Zec_2:13. Others have thought that this refers to the state of
the saints after the day of judgment, when there will be an entire
cessation from persecution and trouble, and when the souls under
the altar will have done crying for vengeance; but this will be not
for half an hour only, but to all eternity; nor will angels and
saints be then silent. Rather this is to be understood of that
peace and rest which the church enjoyed upon Constantine's having
defeated all his enemies, when he brought the church into a state
of profound tranquillity and ease; and this lasted but for a little
while, which is here expressed by about, or almost half an hour, as
the Syriac version renders it; for in a short time the Arian heresy
broke out, which introduced great troubles in the church, and at
last violent persecutions. The allusion is, as in the whole of the
following vision of the angel at the altar, to the offering of
incense; at which time the people were removed from the temple,
from between the porch and altar (l), to some more distant place;
and the priest was alone while he offered incense, and then prayed
a short prayer, that the people might not be affrighted lest he
should be dead (m): and who in the mean while were praying in a
silent, manner without; see Luk_1:9; hence the Jews say (n), that
the offering of incense atones for an ill tongue, for it is a thing
that is introduced , "silently", and it atones for what is done
silently, such as whisperings, backbitings, &c. and they call
(o) silence the best of spices, even of those of which the sweet
incense was made. HE RY, In these verses we have the prelude to the
sounding of the trumpets in several parts. I. The opening of the
last seal. This was to introduce a new set of prophetical iconisms
and events; there is a continued chain of providence, one part
linked to another (where
4. one ends another begins), and, though they may differ in
nature and in time, they all make up one wise, well-connected,
uniform design in the hand of God. II. A profound silence in heaven
for the space of half an hour, which may be understood either, 1.
Of the silence of peace, that for this time no complaints were sent
up to the ear of the Lord God of sabaoth; all was quiet and well in
the church, and therefore all silent in heaven, for whenever the
church on earth cries, through oppression, that cry comes up to
heaven and resounds there; or, 2. A silence of expectation; great
things were upon the wheel of providence, and the church of God,
both in heaven and earth, stood silent, as became them, to see what
God was doing, according to that of Zec_2:13, Be silent, O all
flesh, before the Lord, for he has risen up out of his holy
habitation. And elsewhere, Be still, and know that I am God. III.
The trumpets were delivered to the angels who were to sound them.
Still the angels are employed as the wise and willing instruments
of divine Providence, and they are furnished with all their
materials and instructions from God our Saviour. As the angels of
the churches are to sound the trumpet of the gospel, the angels of
heaven are to sound the trumpet of Providence, and every one has
his part given him. JAMISO , Rev_8:1-13. Seventh seal. Preparation
for the seven trumpets. The first four and the consequent plagues.
was Greek, came to pass; began to be. silence in heaven about ...
half an hour The last seal having been broken open, the book of
Gods eternal plan of redemption is opened for the Lamb to read to
the blessed ones in heaven. The half hours silence contrasts with
the previous jubilant songs of the great multitude, taken up by the
angels (Rev_7:9-11). It is the solemn introduction to the
employments and enjoyments of the eternal Sabbath-rest of the
people of God, commencing with the Lambs reading the book
heretofore sealed up, and which we cannot know till then. In
Rev_10:4, similarly at the eve of the sounding of the seventh
trumpet, when the seven thunders uttered their voices, John is
forbidden to write them. The seventh trumpet (Rev_11:15-19) winds
up Gods vast plan of providence and grace in redemption, just as
the seventh seal brings it to the same consummation. So also the
seventh vial, Rev_16:17. Not that the seven seals, the seven
trumpets, and the seven vials, though parallel, are repetitions.
They each trace the course of divine action up to the grand
consummation in which they all meet, under a different aspect.
Thunders, lightnings, an earthquake, and voices close the seven
thunders and the seven seals alike (compare Rev_8:5, with
Rev_11:19). Compare at the seventh vial, the voices, thunders,
lightnings, and earthquake, Rev_16:18. The half-hour silence is the
brief pause GIVEN TO JOHN between the preceding vision and the
following one, implying, on the one hand, the solemn introduction
to the eternal sabbatism which is to follow the seventh seal; and,
on the other, the silence which continued during the
incense-accompanied prayers which usher in the first of the seven
trumpets (Rev_8:3-5). In the Jewish temple, musical instruments and
singing resounded during the whole time of the offering of the
sacrifices, which formed the first part of the service. But at the
offering of incense, solemn silence was kept (My soul waiteth upon
God, Psa_62:1; is silent, Margin; Psa_65:1, Margin), the people
praying secretly all the time. The half-hour stillness implies,
too, the earnest adoring expectation with which the blessed spirits
and the angels await the succeeding unfolding of Gods judgments. A
short space is implied; for even an hour is so used (Rev_17:12;
Rev_18:10, Rev_18:19).
5. PULPIT, And when. , instead of (as in the other seals), is
read in A, C, and gives a certain indefiniteness which does not
belong to any of the rest (Alford). is, however, found in , B, P,
Andreas. He had opened the seventh seal; he opened. As in the case
of the other seals, the silence accompanies the opening (see on
Rev_6:1, Rev_6:3, Rev_6:5, etc.). This completes the number, and
sets the roll free (Rev_5:1). The contents of the roll do not,
however, become visible, nor are they portrayed otherwise than by
the silence of half an hour (see on Rev_5:1).There was silence in
heaven; there followed a silence (Revised Version); a silence
became; i.e. where there had not been silence previously, owing to
the praises set forth at the close ofRev_7:1-17. This image may
have been suggested by the silence kept by the congregation
without, while the priest offered incense within, the temple (cf.
Luk_1:10). This thought, too, may have led to the following vision,
in which the angel offers incense (Rev_7:3), and in this souse the
vision of the trumpets may be said to have grown out of the seventh
seal, though a similar act precedes the visions of the seals (see
Rev_5:8). But in no other way is there any connection between the
two visions; the events narrated under the vision of the trumpets
are not an exposition of the seventh seal, but a separate vision,
supplementing what has been set forth by the seven seals. The
silence is typical of the eternal peace of heaven, the ineffable
bliss of which it is impossible for mortals to comprehend, and
which is, therefore, symbolized by silence. In the same way the new
name is left unexplained, as something beyond the knowledge of man
in this life, and reserved for the life in heaven (see on
Rev_3:12). It is the sabbath of the Church's history, into the full
comprehension of which man cannot now enter. The interpretation of
this seal varies with different writers, according to the view
taken of the vision as a whole. Bede, Primasius, Victorinus,
Wordsworth, agree in considering that it denotes the beginning of
eternal peace. Those who take the preterist view variously assign
the silence to (1) the destruction of Jerusalem (Manrice); (2) A.D.
312-337 (King); (3) the period following A.D. 395 (Eiliott); (4)
the millennium (Lange); (5) the decree of Julian imposing silence
on the Christians (De Lyra), etc.; Vitringa thinks it relates to
the time when the Church will be triumphant on earth; Hengstenberg,
the astonishment of Christ's enemies; Ebrard, the silence of
creation in awe at the catastrophes about to happen; and
Dusterdieck, similarly, the silence of those in heaven, waiting for
the same events. About the space of half an hour. Most writers are
agreed that the half hour represents a short time. But if (as we
have indicated above) the silence is typical of the eternal rest of
heaven, how can it be short? Possibly the answer is that the
shortness refers to the time during which the seer was
contemplating this aspect of the vision. He had now arrived at the
end; the fate of the Church had been in some measure foreshadowed,
and the final assurance is peace in heaven. That part of the fate
in store for the Church cannot be expounded by the seer. He is
permitted, as it were, to visit the threshold for an instant, and
then he is called away. His message is not yet complete; he is
summoned to receive yet further revelations. But may not the half
hour signify "a long time"? The seer, in his vision, after
beholding a succession of events, experiences a pause complete
silence for the space of half an hour. This time would appear
almost interminable in such circumstances; and the phrase may
therefore be intended to express "an exceedingly lengthened
period," such as a stillness of such a length in the midst of
numbers would appear to St. John. Here, then, closes the vision of
the seals. The first four, prefaced by the assurance of final
victory, deal with events more immediately connected with this
life, and explain to the suffering Christian of all ages that it is
part of God's eternal purpose that he should be exposed to
persecution, trial, and temptation while in the world, and that
such suffering is not the result of God's forgetfulness or
heedlessness. The last three seats refer to three sets of events
connected with the life hereafter.
6. The fifth shows the security of those who have departed this
life; the sixth portrays the safe gathering of God's own, and the
fear and condemnation of the unjust at the judgment day; the
seventh affords a prospect rather than a sight of the eternal
sabbath of heaven, undescribed because indescribable. The whole is
thus completed; the seer is called away to review the ages once
moreto behold new visions, which shall impress more fully, and
supplement, the truths which the visions of the seals have, in a
measure, revealed. BIBLICAL ILLUSTRATOR, The silence of heaven I.
The silence of meditation. There is a blessing, which we know not
yet, in thought. In this busy human life it is hard to think. The
world is too much with us. It drowns the still small voice of God.
But in heaven thought will no more be disturbed. There will be no
unsolved perplexities, no distracting fancies. The plan of Creation
and Redemption will be unfolded. The discords of earth will be
resolved in the celestial harmony. II. The silence of adoration.
When we see God as He is, we shall praise Him as we ought. The
cloud which spreads between Him and us shall be done away. We shall
enter into that rapture of worship which finds no voice in words.
Our soul will lose itself in the infinite bliss of communion with
Him who is its Father and its God. III. The silence of fruition.
All the voices of earth are only so many cryings for something that
is not of earth, but of heaven. They are expressions of a Divine
dissatisfaction with the limitations of our human life. Is there
not something that we all desire and cry out for to be rich,
perhaps, or successful, or happy, or good? And will it not always
be a desire, never fulfilled? Could the dearest wish of our heart
be granted to-day, another wish, still dearer, would arise
to-morrow. Every new day dawns with a fresh purity upon our lives,
but in the evening it is stained with failure and sin. We are
always sighing for a holiness which is always unattained and
unattainable. Nay, the blessings which God gives us do not last
long. Over all our life there hangs the shadow of death. We are
always dreading to speak that saddest, tenderest word on earth,
Farewell. There is silence in heaven, because there is no loss nor
any boding fear of parting still to come. They who live in the
Divine Presence are sheltered from the storms of time. They are
safe for ever and ever. (J. E. C. Welldon, M. A.) Thirty minutes in
heaven I. God and all heaven then honoured silence. The full power
of silence many of us have yet to learn. We are told that when
Christ was arraigned He answered not a word. That silence was
louder than any thunder that ever shook the world. Ofttimes, when
we are assailed and misrepresented, the mightiest thing to say is
to say nothing, and the mightiest thing to do is to do nothing. II.
Heaven must be an eventful and active place. It could afford only
thirty minutes of recess. The celestial programme is so crowded
with spectacle that it can afford only one recess in all eternity
and that for a short space. III. The immortality of a half-hour.
Oh, the half-hours! They decide everything. I am not asking what
you will do with the years or months or days of your life, but what
of the half-hours. Tell me the history of your half-hours, and I
will tell you the story of your whole life on earth and the story
of your whole life in eternity. Look out for the fragments of time.
They are pieces of eternity. IV. My text suggests a way of studying
heaven so that we can better understand it. The word eternity that
we handle so much is an immeasurable word. Now, we have
7. something that we can come nearer to grasping, and it is a
quiet heaven. When we discourse about the multitudes of heaven, it
must be almost a nervous shock to those who have all their lives
been crowded by many people, and who want a quiet heaven. (T. De
Witt Talmage.) Silence in heaven Are such seasons of quietudeof
calm and holy anticipationneedful to be observed thereand shall we
wonder that they are appointed unto us here? You will observe that
to almost all things there are these parentheses. Nature very
seldom does her work without a cessation, where all seems lost and
dead. A winter always lies between the autumn sowing and the
spring-time shooting. There are very few providences which happen
to man without delays, which seem as if they had broken their
courses. Promises seem very slow of foot in their travel. And it is
generally long to our feelingsafter the prayer has gone upbefore
the answer falls. Peace does not always come quicklyeven to the
strongest faith. And grace does not succeed to gracenor to joyin
one unbroken series. Life is full of pause. And these prefaces of
Gods worksthese introductions these heraldings of the great
approachesthese subduings of soulthese times to make ready: they
are only the reflections of that which St. John saw passing within
the veil: There was silence in heaven about the space of half an
hour. Let us cultivate the heavenly power of silence. Let us pray
for the angelic gift of silence. It is what we all want. There are
many voicesin continuous streamspeaking in the world; some from
within, some from without; voices in the sublime and in the lofty
things around us; voices in very common things, and every little
passing event; but you do not hear them. Why? There is not silence
enough in the breast. Be more still. Listen for the whispers of
God, and ice whether earth, and heaven, and your own heart also, do
net talk sweetly to you all the day, and all the night, about
spiritual things! I advise every onewho wishes to be a true
worshipper, and to improve his communion with Godto exercise
complete silence. The spiritual life would often be much the better
for more of a devout silence. May it not be that there is,
sometimes, more filial love and confidence in the prayer that does
not speak, and cannot speak, than in any oral prayer? And there are
some seasons which specially invite the piety of silence. Such a
time is those early days of deep sorrow: I was as a dumb man that
openeth not his mouth. Such a time is the waiting, before we begin
some work that God has given us to defer Himlike the wilderness to
Moses, or Elijah in Horeb. Such a time is the moment spent with God
before we make an answer. Such a time is the few minutes before
prayer; or before a service here; or before the Holy Communion.
Such a time may be at the gates of glory. For it is a pleasant
thing to pass the threshold of eternity silently. Does not Godfor
this very reasonmake His children go throughone after anotheralone?
(J. Vaughan, M. A.) Soul-silence I. Soul-silence often follows
great excitement. From the storms of remorse, secular anxieties,
arid social bereavements, the soul of the genuinely Christly arises
into a peace that passeth all understanding. II. Soul-silence is
often found absorbing worship. 1. The prayers of saints on earth
are of great practical interest in the spiritual universe.
8. (1) They are offerings that are acceptable to its Supreme
Ruler. (2) In rendering them acceptable to God, His highest
spiritual ministers are deeply engaged. 2. The prayers of saints on
earth exert an influence on the things of time. III. Soul-silence
often springs from high expectancy. What wonderful things are
before us all! Were we earnestly waiting for the manifestation of
the sons of God, waiting the advent of Him who is to wind up the
affairs of the world, how silent should we be! (D. Thomas, D. D.)
Silence I. The silence of suppression. While I kept silence, David
says; that is, while I suppressed my sense of sin, and sought to
check and coerce the tide of free confession. This is the silence
of our fallen nature; our abuse of Gods gift, bestowed upon us for
a very different end. If any of us are thus silent to God, let not
night close upon us without breaking that silence: if conscience
accuses us of sin, let it be heard while it may: if any iniquity of
ours is separating between us and God, bring it to Him, and spare
it mot, that it may be forgiven for Christs sake, and its chain
removed from us by His Holy Spirit. II. The silence of conviction.
First there has been that sullen silence of which we have spoken;
the heart locked up, and refusing to empty itself of its secret.
Then, many times, the first silence has been broken by
prevarications, excuses, and self-justifications, going perhaps
even to the length of direct falsehood. Then, in process of time,
by patient hearing and inquiry, these also have been broken down:
the false tongue has been confuted by the force of truth, and every
refuge of lies has at length been swept away. When this is so, then
at last there is silence; refreshing by comparison, and, in this
life, certainly in young life, hopeful; till it comes, there is no
hope, because the soul is still trying to say Peace to itself
fallaciously. But now there is silence: now may punishment try its
remedial power, being accompanied, as it ever ought to be, with a
fall forgiveness. Now, too, may the sinner, humbled in himself,
before others, and before God, listen with livelier interest to the
assurance of Gods forgiveness, to the comfort of the blood of
sprinkling which speaks not to reproach but to console. III. The
silence of preparation. Every real, certainly every great, work of
man is prefaced by a long silence, during which the mind is
concentrated upon the object, and possessing itself with that which
is afterwards to be produced. What is all study but the preliminary
to some work, or else to ones lifes work? It is not in man to be
capable of always giving out, without long processes of taking in.
This is the secret of so many barren and unfruitful ministries,
that men are trying to dispense with silence: they are altogether
in public, never in solitude: they are counting their exertions,
instead of weighing them, satisfied if they are always labouring,
without forcing themselves to prepare for labour by silent study,
by silent meditation, by silent prayer. IV. The silence of
endurance; that of him who with a noble self-restraint refuses to
avail himself even of a plea which might avail for his deliverance.
He is following the example of One who Himself in the very crisis
of His earthly fate exhibited in its fullest glory the dignity and
the majesty of silence. V. The silence of disapprobation; that
silence by which, perhaps most effectively of all, whether in the
society of the young or of the old, a Christian enters his protest
against wrong, and acts as a witness for the truth. Who has not
seen the effect of silence, of a
9. Christian, a consistent silence, upon uncharitable or wicked
conversation? Before the presence of disapprobation, however
unobtrusive, evil soon shrinks, cowers, and withdraws itself. VI.
The silence of self-restraint, general and habitual, or else
special and particular. VII. The silence of sorrow, and of sympathy
with sorrow. 1. Grief may forget itself (as it is called) for the
moment in society, and sorrow for sin may spend itselfalas! it
often doesin fruitless and only half-explicit confessions and
lamentations to man: but these are dangerous as well as vain
remedies. In either case, be silent; only add the words, silent
before God. Let Him hear all from you, and, to speak generally,
none else. 2. I spoke, too, of the silence of sympathy. Who has not
suffered from the officiousness of a talking sympathy? VIII. The
silence of awe, the silence of meditation, the silence of prayer,
yes, the silence of praise. IX. The silence of death. The silence
of death may reign around the bed from which a living soul has
departed and on which a dead body lies alone. But it reigned first
in the departing soul itself. At what particular point in the
illness isolation began, and the presence of friends was no longer
felt in the dying, varies no doubt with the nature of the disease,
and certainly can by none be defined: but well may it be seen that
after a certain point silence and solitude have taken possession,
that there is, to all intents, an abstraction from things around,
and an absorption in things within. (Dean Vaughan.) Silence What is
silence? Not the absence, the negation of speech, but the pause,
the suspension of speech. Speech is, we all admit, one of Gods
choicest gifts to man, for the employment of which man is specially
and awfully responsible. Must not something of the like sacredness
and responsibility belong to that correlative powerthe power of
silence? As if to impress this truth upon our minds, Scripture
invests silence with circumstances of peculiar interest and awe.
Thus, when Solomon dedicated the Temple to Jehovah, after that the
priests had arranged all the sacred furniture, and completed the
solemn service of consecration, there was silence, and during that
silence the glory of the Lord, in the form of a cloud, so filled
the whole building that the priests could not stand to minister by
reason of the cloud. Thus, again, in the text, when the angel had
opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven about the
space of half an hour. Very wonderful and mysterious is this
instance of silence. It was as though, upon the opening of the
mystic seal, events so strange and amazing were to follow
throughout the universe, that the very hosts of heaven were
compelled to suspend their worship and adoration in order to behold
and listen! Now, the first sort of silence to which I would call
your attention is the silence of worship, of awe, and reverence.
The Lord is in His holy temple; let all the earth keep silence
before Him. Such is the canon for worship laid down by Habakkuk;
and it is a canon as much binding upon us as upon those to whom it
was originally addressed. When we come up to the house of prayer,
there to meet Christ upon the mercy-seatthere to hear His voice
speaking to us in the read and spoken Wordthere to receive Him into
our very souls in the Sacrament of His broken Body and shed Blood
we are bound to observe the silence of awe and reverence. Except
when we open our lips to join in prayer and praise to God, our
attitude within these hallowed walls should
10. be that of silence, of those who are impressed with the
sanctity of the place, and who know and feel that the Almighty God
is indeed in their midst. Yes; and it would be well, could we put
more of this holy silence into our religious acts. Our religion
shares too much in the faults of the age in which we live. It is
too public, too outspoken, conducted too much as a business; and so
the inner and contemplative element is too much lost sight of. The
silence of self-examination, the silence of the hearts unsyllabled
supplication, the silence of meditation on the mysteries of
redeeming lovethese are forms of silence which every one must
observe often who would have the flame of spiritual life to burn
bright and clear in his soul. Then, again, there is the silence of
preparation. Every great work that has ever been achieved has been
preceded by this-the doer making himself ready, by thought and
study, for action. Every great achievement, whether in the moral or
the intellectual world, has been in a sense like Solomons temple it
has risen noiselessly, silently, without sound of axe or hammer.
Therefore is that great primary act in religionthe conviction of
sininvariably preceded by deep and solemn silence, while the sinner
stands before God self-accused and self-condemned. Therefore, also,
is silence ever present at all the more solemn passages of our
life. Sorrow real, genuine sorrowis ever silent. A crya tearwhat
relief would these be; but they must not intrude into the sacred
ground of sorrow, the sorrow of the justbereaved widow or orphan.
And so, too, sympathy with sorrow is ever silent. Idle words, or
still idler tearsthese are for false comforters, like those who
troubled the patriarch Job; the true sympathy is the sympathy of a
lookof the presence of silence, not of uttered consolation. And now
think of that last silencea silence that we must all experience,
and for which, by silence, we must prepare nowthe silence of death.
What exactly the silence of death is, none but the dying can know.
May we have known what it was, day by day, to be many times alone
with that God who must then be alone with us, to judge or else to
save. (Charles H. Collier, M. A.) Silence in heaven Whatever
judgments come down upon the region below, they are seen by the
apostle to be the consequences of activities in the region above.
No stroke falls on earth that is not directed in heaven. The two
worlds move in concert. The time-accomplishments of one world
correspond to the time-appointments of another. We have set before
us, in unmistakable symbolism, this truthThat in the developments
of Gods plans in providence, there are times of comparative
quietude, during which it seems as if the progress of things was
stayed awhile. I. What is intended when we speak of progress being
apparently stayed? There are in the Word of God great promises and
prophecies which open up a glorious vision for the future days.
There have been also great events which have excited in the Church
of God the strongest hopes, and which ever and anon form a restful
background. To such periods there succeed long years in which
either no appreciable advance is made towards the inbringing of the
new heavens and the new earth; or if in one direction some progress
appears, in another the cause of righteousness seems checked afresh
by new developments of error, folly, and sin. The prophets of God
are crying, Flee from the wrath to come. They long for some
manifestation of Divine power to startle man. But no. Man goes on
sinning. And our God seems a God that does nothing (Carlyle). The
thunder is rolled up. The lightning is sheathed. There is a
prolonged lull. There is silence in heaven. The sceptic makes use
of the quietude to ask, Where is the promise of His coming? The
careless one settles down at his ease, and cries, The vision that
he seeth is for many days to come. Hollow professors desert in
crowds, and go over to the
11. ranks of the enemy. And stillstill there is silence in
heaven. No voice is heard from the invisible realms to break in
upon the steady course of this earths affairs, or to arouse and
convict a slumbering world! II. What does this silence mean? What
does it mean? 1. Negatively. (1) It does not mean that this world
of ours is cut adrift in space, or that the human family are left
fatherless and lone. (2) Nor does it mean that time is being lost
in the development of the plans of God. Catastrophes are not the
only means of progress. (3) Nor does it imply that God is
indifferent to the sin which He is ever witnessing. The Lord is not
slack, etc. (4) Nor does it imply that God is working on any other
plan than that which He has laid down in the book. (5) Nor does the
silence mean that God will ultimately let sinners escape with
impunity (Rom_2:8; Rom_2:4). 2. Positively. (1) We are not to
expect startling providences at every turn of life. (2) We are to
he guided more by what God says than by what we see before our
eyes. The book gives principles which are eternal. (3) There are
other sides to, and other forms of, Gods working than those which
startle and alarm. (4) By the silence of heaven God would test His
peoples faith, and quicken them to more fervent prayer. (5) God
would thus teach us to study principles rather than to gaze on
incident. III. What should this silence teach us? And what effect
upon us should it have? 1. Let us learn anew to exercise faith in
the spiritual power which God wields by His Spirit, rather than in
the material energy which shakes a globe. 2. Let us use heavens
time of keeping silence as a time for breaking ours (Isa_62:1;
Isa_62:6-7). 3. Let the ungodly make use of the space given for
repentance, by turning to the Lord with full purpose of heart. 4.
Let us lay to heart the certain fact, that, although judgment is
delayed, come it will. (C. Clemance, D. D.) EBC, THE FIRST SIX
TRUMPETS. THE two consolatory visions of chap. 7 have closed, and
the Seer returns to that opening of the seven Seals which had been
interrupted in order that these two visions might be interposed.
Six Seals had been opened in chap. 6; the opening of the seventh
follows: - "And when He opened the seventh seal, there followed
silence in heaven about the space of half an hour. And I saw the
seven angels which stand before God; and there were given
12. unto them seven trumpets. And another angel came and stood
over the altar, having a golden censer; and there was given unto
him much incense, that he should give it unto the prayers of all
the saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne. And
the smoke of the incense, with the prayers of the saints, went up
before God out of the angels hand. And the angel taketh the censer;
and he filled it with the fire of the altar, and cast it upon the
earth: and there followed thunders, and voices, and lightnings, and
an earthquake. And the seven angels which had the seven trumpets
prepared themselves to sound (Rev_8:1-6)." Before looking at the
particulars of this Seal, we have to determine the relation in
which it stands to the Seals of chap. 6 as well as to the visions
following it. Is it as isolated, as independent, as those that have
come before it; and are its contents exhausted by the first six
verses of the chapter? or does it occupy such a position of its own
that we are to regard the following visions as developed out of it?
And if the latter be the case, how far does the development extend?
In answering these questions, it can hardly be denied that if we
are to look upon the seventh Seal as standing independent and
alone, its contents have not the significance which we seem
entitled to expect. It is the last Seal of its own series; and when
we turn to the last member of the Trumpet series at Rev_11:15, or
of the Bowl series at Rev_16:17, we find them marked, not by less,
but by much greater, force than had belonged in either case to the
six preceding members. The seventh Trumpet and the seventh Bowl sum
up and concentrate the contents of their predecessors. In the one
the judgments of God represented by the Trumpets, in the other
those represented by the Bowls, culminate in their sharpest
expression and their most tremendous potency. There is nothing of
that kind in the seventh Seal if it terminates with the preparation
of the Trumpet angels to sound; and the analogy of the Apocalypse
therefore, an analogy supplying in a book so symmetrically
constructed an argument of greater than ordinary weight, is against
that supposition. Again, the larger portion of the first six verses
of this chapter does not suggest the contents of the Seal Rather
would it seem as if these contents were confined to the "silence"
spoken of in Rev_8:1, and as if what follows from Rev_8:2-6 were to
be regarded as no part of the Seal itself, but simply as
introductory to the Trumpet visions. Everything said bears upon it
the marks of preparation for what is to come, and we are not
permitted to rest in what is passing as if it were a final and
conclusive scene in the great spectacle presented to the Seer. For
these reasons the view often entertained that the visions to which
we proceed are developed out of the seventh Seal may be regarded as
correct. If so, how far does the development extend? The answer
invariably given to this question is, To the end of the Trumpets.
But the answer is not satisfactory. The general symmetry of the
Apocalypse militates against it There is then no correspondence
between the last Trumpet and the last Seal, nothing to suggest the
thought of a development of the Bowls out of the seventh Trumpet in
a manner corresponding to the development of the Trumpets out of
the seventh Seal In these circumstances the only probable
conclusion is that both the Bowls and the Trumpets are developed
out of the seventh Seal, and that that development does not close
until we reach the end of chap. 16. If what has now been said be
correct, it will throw important light upon the relation of the
Seals to the two series of the Trumpets and the Bowls taken
together; while, at the same time, it will lend us valuable aid in
the interpretation of all the three series. Returning to the words
before us, it is said that, at the opening of the seventh Seal,
there
13. followed silence in heaven about the space of half an hour.
This silence may perhaps include a cessation even of the songs
which rise before the throne of God from that redeemed creation the
voice of whose praise rests not either day or night.1 Yet it is not
necessary to think so. The probability rather is that it arises
from a cessation only of the "lightnings and voices and thunders"
which at Rev_4:5 proceed out of the throne, and which are resumed
at Rev_8:5 of the present chapter, when the fire of the altar is
cast from the angels censer upon the earth. A brief suspension of
judgment is thereby indicated, a pause by and during which the
Almighty would call attention to the manifestations of His wrath
about to follow. The exact duration of this silence, "about the
space of half an hour," has never been satisfactorily explained;
and the general analogy of St Johns language condemns the idea of a
literal interpretation. We shall perhaps be more in accordance with
the spirit in which the Revelation is written if we consider - (1)
that in that book the half of anything suggests, not so much an
actual half, as a broken and interrupted whole, five a broken ten,
six a broken twelve, three and a half a broken seven; (2) that in
the Gospel of St. John we find on more than one occasion mention
made of an "hour" by which at one time the actions, at another the
sufferings, of Jesus are determined: "Woman, what have I to do with
thee? Mine hour is not yet come;" "Father, save Me from this hour:
but for this cause came I unto this hour."2 The "hour" of Jesus is
thus to St. John the moment at which action, having been first
resolved on by the Father, is taken by the Son; and a "half-hour"
may simply denote that the course of events has been interrupted,
and that the instant for renewed judgment has been delayed. Such an
interpretation will also be in close correspondence with the verses
following, as well as with what we have seen to be the probable
meaning of the "silence" of Rev_8:1. Preparation for action, rather
than action, marks as yet the opening of the seventh Seal. (1
Rev_4:8; 2 Joh_2:4; Joh_12:27) That preparation is next described.
St. John saw seven trumpets given to the seven angels which stand
before God. In whatever other respects these seven angels are to be
distinguished from the hosts of angels which surround the throne,
the commission now given shows that they are angels of a more
exalted order and a more irresistible power. They are in fact the
expression of the Divine Judge of men, or rather of the mode in
which He chooses by judgment to express Himself. We are not even
required to think of them as numerically seven, for seven in its
sacred meaning is the number of unity, though of unity in the
variety as well as the combination of its agencies. The "seven
Spirits of God" are His one Spirit; the "seven churches," His one
Church; the "seven horns" and "seven eyes" of the Lamb, His one
powerful might and His one penetrating glance. In like manner the
seven Seals, the seven Trumpets, and the seven Bowls embody the
thought of many judgments which are yet in reality one. Thus also
the angels here are seven, not because literally so, but because
that number brings out the varied forms as well as the essential
oneness of the action of Him to whom the Father has given
"authority to execute judgment, because He is a Son of man."* (*
Joh_5:27) As yet the seven trumpets have only been given to the
seven angels. More has to pass before they put them to their lips
and sound. Another angel is seen who came and stood over the altar,
having a golden censer in his hand. At the opening of the fifth
Seal we read of an "altar" which it was impossible not to identify
with the great brazen altar, the altar of burnt-offering, in the
outer court of the sanctuary. Such identification is not so obvious
here; and perhaps a majority of commentators agree in thinking that
the altar now spoken of is rather the golden or incense altar which
had its place within the Tabernacle, immediately in front of the
second veil. To this altar the priest on ordinary occasions, and
more particularly the high-priest on the great Day of Atonement,
brought
14. a censer with burning frankincense, that the smoke of the
incense, as it rose into the air, might be a symbol to the
congregation of Israel that its prayers, offered according to the
Divine will, ascended as a sweet savour to God. It is possible that
this may be the altar meant; yet the probabilities of the case
rather lead to the supposition that allusion is made to the altar
of sacrifice in the Tabernacle court; for (1) when the Seer speaks
here and again in Rev_8:5 of "the altar," and in Rev_8:3 of "the
golden altar," he seems to distinguish between the two. (2) The
words fire of the altar are in favor of the same conclusion.
According to the ritual of the Law, it was from the brazen altar
that fire was taken in order to kindle the incense,1 while at the
same time fire continually burned upon that altar, but not upon the
altar within the Tabernacle. (3) The thought represented by the
symbolism seems to be that the sufferings of the saints gave
efficacy to their prayers, and drew down the answer of Him who
says, "Call upon Me in the day of trouble, and I will answer thee,
and thou shalt glorify Me."2 (4) The words of Rev_8:3, the prayers
of all the saints, and the similar expression in Rev_8:4, remind us
of the prayers of the fifth Seal, now swelled by the prayers of
those New Testament saints who have been added to "the blessed
fellowship" of the Old Testament martyrs. These prayers, it will be
remembered, rose from beneath the altar of burnt-offering; and it
is natural to think that the same altar is again alluded to in
order to bring out the idea of a similar martyrdom. What we see,
therefore, is an angel taking the prayers and adding to them much
incense, so that we may behold them as they ascend up before God
and receive His answer. (1 Smiths Dictionary of the Bible, INCENSE;
2 Psa_50:15) Further, it ought to be observed that the prayers
referred to are for judgment upon sin. There is nothing to justify
the supposition that they are partly for judgment upon, partly for
mercy to, a sinful world. They are simply another form of the cry,
"How long, O Master, the holy and true, dost Thou not judge and
avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?"* They are a cry
that God will vindicate the cause of righteousness. (* Rev_6:10)
The cry is heard, for the angel takes of the fire of the altar on
which the saints had been sacrificed as an offering to God, and
casts it into the earth, that it may consume the sin by which it
had been kindled. The lex talionis again starts to view; not merely
punishment, but retribution, the heaviest of all retribution,
because it is accompanied by a convicted conscience, retribution in
kind. Everything is now ready for judgment, and the seven angels
which had the seven trumpets prepare themselves to sound: - "And
the first sounded, and there followed hail and fire mingled with
blood, and they were cast into the earth: and the third part of the
earth was burnt up, and the third part of the trees was burnt up,
and all green grass was burnt up (Rev_8:7)." To think, in
interpreting these words, of a literal burning up of a third part
of the "earth," of the "trees," and of the "green grass," would
lead us astray. Comparing the first Trumpet with those that follow,
we have simply a general description of judgment as it affects the
land in contradistinction to the sea, the rivers and fountains of
water, and the heavenly bodies by which the earth is lighted. The
punishment is drawn down by a guilty world upon itself when it
rises in opposition to Him who at first prepared the land for the
abode of men, planted it with trees pleasant to the eye, cast over
it its mantle of green, and pronounced it to be very good. Of every
tree of the garden, except the tree of the knowledge of good and
evil, might our first parents eat; while grass covered the earth
for their cattle, and herb for their service. All nature was to
minister to the wants of man, and in cultivating the garden and the
field he was to find light and happy labor. But sin came in. Thorns
and thistles sprang up on every side. Labor became a burden, and
the
15. fruitful field was changed into a wilderness which could
only be subdued by constant, patient, and often-disappointed toil.
This is the thought - a thought often dwelt upon by the prophets of
the Old Testament - that is present to the Seers mind. One of the
plagues of Egypt, however, may also be in his eye. When the
Almighty would deliver His people from that land of their
captivity, "He sent thunder and hail, and the fire ran along upon
the ground; and the Lord rained hail upon the land of Egypt. So
there was hail, and fire mingled with the hail, very grievous. . .
. And the hail smote throughout all the land of Egypt all that was
in the field, both man and beast; and the hail smote every herb of
the field, and broke every tree of the field."* That plague the
Seer has in his mind; but he is not content to use its traits
alone, terrible as they were. The sin of a guilty world in refusing
to listen to Him who speaks from heaven is greater than was the sin
of those who refused Him that spake on earth, and their punishment
must be in proportion to their sin. Hence the plague of Egypt is
magnified. We read, not of hail and fire only, but of hail and fire
mingled with (or rather in) blood, so that the blood is the outward
and visible covering of the hail and of the fire. In addition to
this, we have the herbs and trees of the field, not merely smitten
and broken, but utterly consumed by fire. What is meant by the
"third part" of the earth and its products being attacked it is
difficult to say. The probability is that, as a whole consists of
three parts, partial destruction only is intended, yet not
destruction of a third part of the earth, leaving two-thirds
untouched; but a third part of the earth and of its produce is
everywhere consumed. (* Exo_9:23-25) The second Trumpet is now
blown: - "And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great
mountain burning with fire was cast into the sea: and the third
part of the sea became blood; and there died the third part of the
creatures which were in the sea, even they that had life; and the
third part of the ships was destroyed (Rev_8:8-9)." As the first
Trumpet affected the land, so the second affects the sea; and the
remarks already made upon the one destruction are for the most part
applicable to the other. The figure of removing a mountain from its
place and casting it into the sea was used by our Lord to express
what beyond all else it was impossible to accomplish by mere human
power: "Verily I say unto you, If ye have faith, and doubt not, ye
shall not only do what is done to the fig tree, but even if ye
shall say unto this mountain, Be thou taken up and cast into the
sea, it shall be done."l In so speaking, our Lord had followed the
language of the prophets, who were accustomed to illustrate by the
thought of the removal of mountains the greatest acts of Divine
power: "What art thou, O great mountain? before Zerubbabel thou
shalt become a plain;" "Therefore will we not fear, though the
mountains be carried into the midst of the seas."2 (1 Mat_21:21; 2
Zec_4:7; Psa_46:2) Even the figure of a "burnt mountain" is not
strange to the Old Testament, for the prophet Jeremiah thus
denounces woe on Babylon: "Behold, I am against thee, O destroying
mountain, saith the Lord, which destroyest all the earth: and I
will stretch out Mine hand upon thee, and roll thee down from the
rocks, and make thee a burnt mountain."* (* Jer_51:25) The plagues
of Egypt, too, are again taken advantage of by the Seer, for in the
first of these Moses "lifted up the rod, and smote the waters that
were in the river; . . . and all the waters that were in the river
were turned to blood. And the fish that was in the river died; and
the river stank, and the Egyptians could not drink of the water of
the river; and there was blood throughout all the land of Egypt."*
Here, however, the plague is extended, embracing as it does not
only the river of Egypt, but the sea, with all the ships that sail
upon it, and all its fish. Again also, as before, the "third part"
is not to be thought of as
16. confined to one region of the ocean, while the remaining
two-thirds are left untouched. It is to be sought everywhere over
the whole compass of the deep. (* Exo_8:20-21) The third Trumpet is
now blown: - "And the third angel sounded, and there fell from
heaven a great star, burning as a torch, and it fell upon the third
part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of the waters; and the
name of the star is called Wormwood: and the third part of the
waters became worm wood; and many men died of the waters, because
they were made bitter (Rev_8:10-11)." The third Trumpet is to be
understood upon the same principles and in the same general sense
as the two preceding Trumpets. The figures are again such as meet
us in the Old Testament, though they are used by the Seer in his
own free and independent way. Thus the prophet Isaiah, addressing
Babylon in his magnificent description of her fall, exclaims, "How
art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!"1 and
thus also the prophet Jeremiah denounces judgment upon rebellious
Israel: "Therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel;
Behold, I will feed them, even this people, with wormwood, and give
them water of gall to drink."2 The bitter waters of Marah also
lived in the recollections of Israel as the first, and not the
least terrible, punishment of the murmuring of their fathers
against Him who had brought them out into what seemed but a barren
wilderness, instead of leaving them to quench their thirst by the
sweet waters of the Nile.3 Thus the waters which the world offers
to its votaries are made bitter, so bitter that they become
wormwood itself, the very essence of bitterness. Again the "third
part" of them is thus visited, but this time with a feature not
previously mentioned: the destruction of human life, - many men
died of the waters. Under the first Trumpet only inanimate nature
was affected; under the second we rose to creatures that had life;
under the third we rise to "many men." The climax ought to be
noticed, as illustrating the style of the Apostles thought and
aiding us in the interpretation of his words. A similar climax may
perhaps also be intended by the agents successively employed under
these Trumpets: hail and fire, a great mountain burning, and a
falling star. (1 Isa_14:12; 2 Jer_9:15; 3 Exo_15:23) The fourth
Trumpet is now blown: - "And the fourth angel sounded, and the
third part of the sun was smitten, and the third part of the moon,
and the third part of the stars; that the third part of them should
be darkened, and the day should not shine for the third part of it,
and the night in like manner (Rev_8:12)." This Trumpet offers no
contradiction to what was previously said, that the first four
members of the three series of Seals, of Trumpets, and of Bowls
deal with the material rather than the spiritual side of man, with
man as a denizen of this world rather than of the next. The
heavenly bodies are here viewed solely in their relation to earth
and its inhabitants. As to the judgment, it rests, like those of
the first and second Trumpets, upon the thought of the Egyptian
plague of darkness: "And the Lord said unto Moses, Stretch out
thine hand toward heaven, that there may be darkness over the land
of Egypt, even darkness that may be felt And Moses stretched forth
his hand toward heaven; and there was a thick darkness in all the
land of Egypt three days: they saw not one another, neither rose
any from his place for three days: but all the children of Israel
had lights in their dwellings."* The trait of the Egyptian plague
alluded to in this last sentence is not mentioned here; and we have
probably, therefore, no right to say that it was in the Seers
thoughts. Yet it is in a high degree probable that it was; and at
all events his obvious reference to that plague may help to
illustrate an important particular to be afterwards noticed, that
all the Trumpet judgments fall directly upon the world, and
not
17. the Church. As under the first three Trumpets, the third
part of the light of sun, and moon, and stars is alone darkened. (*
Exo_10:21-23) The first four Trumpets have now been blown, and we
reach the line of demarcation by which each series of judgments is
divided into its groups of four and three. That line is drawn in
the present instance with peculiar solemnity and force: - "And I
saw, and I heard an eagle flying m mid-heaven, saying with a, great
voice, Woe, woe, woe, for them that dwell on the earth by reason of
the other voices of the three angels who are yet to sound
(Rev_8:13)." Attention ought to be paid to the fact that the cry
uttered in mid-heaven, and thus penetrating to the most distant
corners of the earth, proceeds from an eagle, and not, as in the
Authorized Version, from an "angel;" and the eagle is certainly
referred to for the purpose of adding fresh terror to the scene. If
we would enter into the Seers mind, we must think of it as the
symbol of rapine and plunder. To him the prominent characteristic
of that bird is not its majesty, but its swiftness, its strength,
and its hasting to the prey.* (* Comp. Job_9:26) Thus ominously
announced, the fifth Trumpet is now blown: - "And the fifth angel
sounded, and I saw a star out of heaven fallen unto the earth: and
there was given to him the key of the well of the abyss. And he
opened the well of the abyss; and there went up a smoke out of the
well, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the sun and the air were
darkened by reason of the smoke of the well. And out of the smoke
came forth locusts upon the earth: and power was given them, as the
scorpions of the earth have power. And it was said unto them that
they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green
thing, neither any tree; but only such men as have not the seal of
God on their foreheads. And it was given them that they should not
kill them, but that they should be tormented five months: and their
torment was as the torment of a scorpion, when it striketh a man.
And in those days men shall seek death, and shall in no wise find
it; and they shall desire to die, and death fleeth from them. And
the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses prepared for war,
and upon their heads as it were crowns like unto gold, and their
faces were as faces of men. And they had hair as the hair of women,
and their teeth were as the teeth of lions. And they had
breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron; and the sound of
their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses rushing to
war. And they have tails like unto scorpions, and stings: and in
their tails is their power to hurt men five months. They have over
them as king the angel of the abyss: his name in Hebrew is Abaddon,
and in the Greek tongue he hath the name Apollyon (Rev_9:1-11)."
Such is the strange but dire picture of the judgment of the fifth
Trumpet; and we have, as usual, in the first place, to look at the
particulars contained in it. As in several previous instances,
these are founded upon the plagues of Egypt and the language of the
prophets. In both these sources how terrible does a locust plague
appear! In Egypt - "And the Lord said unto Moses, Stretch out thine
hand over the land of Egypt for the locusts, that they may come up
upon the land of Egypt, and eat every herb of the land, even all
that the hail hath left. And Moses stretched forth his rod over the
land of Egypt, and the Lord brought an east wind upon the land all
that day, and all that night; and when it was morning, the east
wind brought the locusts. And the locusts went up over all the land
of Egypt, and rested in all the coasts of Egypt: very grievous were
they; before them there were no such locusts as they, neither after
them shall be such. For they covered the face of the whole earth,
so that the land was darkened; and they did eat every herb of the
land, and all the fruit of the trees which the hail had left: and
there remained not any green thing in the
18. trees, or in the herbs of the field, through all the land
of Egypt."1 Darker even than this is the language of the prophet
Joel. When he sees locusts sweeping across a land, he exclaims,
"The land was as the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a
desolate wilderness;"2 and from their irresistible and destructive
ravages he draws not a few traits of the dread events by which the
coming of the day of the Lord shall be accompanied: "The appearance
of them is as the appearance of horses; and as horsemen, so shall
they run. Like the noise of chariots on the tops of mountains shall
they leap, like the noise of a flame of fire that devoureth the
stubble, as a strong people set in battle array. . . . They shall
run like mighty men; they shall climb the wall like men of war; and
they shall march everyone on his ways, and they shall not break
their ranks. . . . They shall run to and fro in the city; they
shall run upon the wall, they shall climb up upon the houses; they
shall enter in at the windows like a thief. 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."3 (1
Exo_10:12-15; 2 Joe_2:3; 3 Joe_2:4-10) It is no doubt true that in
the description before us the qualities of its locusts are
preternaturally magnified, but that is only what we might expect,
and it is in keeping with the mode in which other figures taken
from the Old Testament are treated in this book. There is a
probability, too, that each trait of the description had a distinct
meaning to St. John, and that it represents some particular phase
of the calamities he intended to depict. But it is hardly possible
now to discover such meanings; and that the Seer had in view
general evil as much at least as evil in certain special forms is
shown by the artificiality of structure marking the passage as a
whole. For the description of the locusts is divided into three
parts, the first general, the second special, the third the
locust-king. The special characteristics of the insects, again, are
seven in number: (1) upon their heads as it were crowns like unto
gold; (2) and their faces were as faces of men; (3) and they had
hair as the hair of women; (4) and their teeth were as the teeth of
lions; (5) and they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of
iron; (6) and the sound of their wings was as the sound of many
chariots; (7) and they have tails like unto scorpions, and stings.
Whether the period of five months, during which these locusts are
said to commit their ravages, is fixed on because the destruction
caused by the natural insect lasts for that length of time, or for
some other reason unknown to us, it is difficult to determine.
There is a want of proof that a locust-plague generally continues
for the number of months thus specified, and it is otherwise more
in accordance with the style of the Apocalypse to regard that
particular period of time as simply denoting that the judgment has
definite limits. One additional particular connected with the fifth
Trumpet ought to be adverted to. It will be noticed that the well
of the abyss whence the plague proceeds is opened by a star fallen
(not "falling") out of heaven, to which the key of the well was
given. We have here one of those contrasts of St. John a due
attention to which is of such importance to the interpreter. This
"fallen star" is the contrast and counterpart of Him who is "the
bright, the morning star," and who "has the keys of death and of
Hades."* (* Rev_22:16; Rev_1:18) At this point the sixth angel
ought to sound; but we are now in the midst of the three last woes,
and each is of so terrible an import that it deserves to be
specially marked. Hence the words of the next verse: - "The first
Woe is past; behold, there come yet two Woes hereafter (Rev_9:12)."
This warning given, the sixth Trumpet is now blown: -
19. "And the sixth angel sounded, and I heard a voice from the
horns of the golden altar which is before God, one saying to the
sixth angel which had the trumpet, Loose the four angels which are
bound at the great river Euphrates. And the four angels were
loosed, which had been prepared for the hour, and day, and month,
and year, that they should kill the third part of men. And the
number of the armies of the horsemen was twice ten thousand times
ten thousand; I heard the number of them. And thus I saw the horses
in the vision, and them that sat on them, having breastplates as of
fire, and of hyacinth, and of brimstone. By these three plagues was
the third part of men killed, by the fire, and the smoke, and the
brimstone, which proceeded out of their mouths. For the power of
the horses is in their mouth, and in their tails: for their tails
are like unto serpents, and with them they do hurt. And the rest of
mankind which were not killed with these plagues repented not of
the works of their hands, that they should not worship demons, and
the idols of gold, and of silver, and of brass, and of stone, and
of wood: which can neither see, nor hear nor walk: and they
repented not of their murders, nor of their sorceries, nor of their
fornication, nor of their thefts. (Rev_9:13-21)." There is much in
this Trumpet that is remarkable even while we confine ourselves to
the more outward particulars contained in it. Thus we are brought
back by it to the thought of those prayers of the saints to which
all the Trumpets are a reply, but which have not been mentioned
since the blowing of the Trumpets began.1 Once more we read of the
golden altar which was before God y in His immediate presence. On
that altar the prayers of all the saints had been laid, that they
might rise to heaven with the much incense added by the angel, and
might be answered in God s own time and way. The voice heard from
the four horns of this altar that is, from the four projecting
points at its four corners, representing the altar in its greatest
potency shows us, what we might have been in danger of forgetting,
that the judgment before us continues to be an answer of the
Almighty to His people s prayers. Again it may be noticed that in
the judgment here spoken of we deal once more with a third part of
the class upon which it falls. Nothing of the kind had been said
under the fifth Trumpet. The inference to be drawn from these
particulars is important We learn that, however distinct the
successive members of any of the three series of the Seals, the
Trumpets, or the Bowls may seem to be, they are yet closely
connected with one another. Though seven in number, there is a
sense in which they are also one; and any characteristic thought
which appears in a single members of the series ought to be carried
through all its members. (* Rev_9:3-5) The judgment itself is
founded, as in the others already considered, upon thoughts and
incidents connected with Old Testament history. The first of these
is the river Euphrates. That great river was the boundary of
Palestine upon the north east "In the same day the Lord made a
covenant with Abram, saying, Unto thy seed have I given this land,
from the river of Egypt unto the great river, the river
Euphrates;"1 and in the days of Solomon this part of the covenant
appears to have been fulfilled, for we are told that "Solomon
reigned over all kingdoms from the river" (that is, the Euphrates)
"unto the land of the Philistines, and unto the border of Egypt."2
The Euphrates, however, was not only the boundary between Israel
and the Assyrians. It was also Israels line of defense against its
powerful and ambitious neighbour, who had to cross its broad stream
before he could seize any part of the Promised Land. By a natural
transition of thought, the Euphrates next became a symbol of the
Assyrians themselves, for its waters, when they rose in flood,
overflowed Israels territory and swept all before them. Then the
prophets saw in the rush of the swollen river a figure of the
scourge of God upon those who would not acknowledge Him: "The Lord
spake also unto me again, saying, Forasmuch as this people refuseth
the waters of Shiloah that go softly, and rejoice in Rezin and
Remaliahs son; now therefore behold, the Lord bringeth
20. up upon them the waters of the river, strong and many, even
the king of Assyria, and all his glory: and he shall come up over
all his channels, and go over all his banks: and he shall pass
through Judah; he shall overflow and go over, he shall reach even
to the neck; and the stretching out of his wings shall fill the
breadth of Thy land, O Immanuel."3 When accordingly the Euphrates
is here spoken of, it is clear that with the river as such we have
nothing to do. It is simply a symbol of judgment; and the four
angels which had been bound at it, but were now loosed, are a token
- four being the number of the world - that the judgment referred
to, though it affects but a third part of men, reaches men over the
whole surface of the globe. When the hour, and the day, and the
month, and the year - that is, when the moment fixed in the
counsels of the Almighty - come, the chains by which destruction
has been kept back shall be broken, and the world shall be over
whelmed by the raging stream. (1 Gen_15:18; 2 1Ki_4:21; 3
Isa_8:5-8) The second Old Testament thought to be noted in this
vision is that of horses. To the Israelite the horse presented an
object of terror rather than admiration, and an army of horsemen
awakened in him the deepest feelings of alarm. Thus it is that the
prophet Habakkuk, describing the coming judgments of God, is
commissioned to exclaim, "Behold ye among the heathen, and regard,
and wonder marvelously: for I will work a work in your days, which
ye will not believe, though it be told you. For, lo, I raise up the
Chaldeans, that bitter and hasty nation, which shall march through
the breadth of the land, to possess the dwelling-places that are
not theirs. They are terrible and dreadful: their judgment and
their dignity shall proceed of themselves. Their horses also are
swifter than the leopards, and are more fierce than the evening
wolves: and their horsemen shall spread themselves, and their
horsemen shall come from far; they shall fly as the eagle that
hasteth to eat. They shall come all for violence: their faces shall
sup up as the east wind, and they shall gather the captivity as the
sand. And they shall scoff at the kings, and the princes shall be a
scorn unto them: they shall deride every stronghold; for they shall
heap dust, and take it."* Like the locusts of the previous vision,
the "horses" now spoken of are indeed clothed with preternatural
attributes; but the explanation is the same. Ordinary horses could
not convey images of sufficient terror. (* Hab_1:5-10) The last two
verses of chap. 9, which follow the sixth Trumpet, deserve our
particular attention. They describe the effect produced upon the
men who did not perish by the previous plagues, and they help to
throw light upon a question most intimately connected with a just
interpretation of the Apocalypse. The question is, Does the Seer,
in any of his visions, anticipate the conversion of the ungodly? or
does he deal, from the beginning to the end of his descriptions,
with righteousness and sin in themselves rather than with righteous
persons who may decline from the truth or sinful persons who may
own and welcome it? The question will meet us again in the
following chapters of this book, and will demand a fuller
discussion than it can receive at present. In the meantime it is
enough to say that, in the two verses now under consideration, no
hint as to the conversion of any ungodly persons by the Trumpet
plagues is given. On the contrary, the "men" - that is, the
two-thirds of the inhabitants of the earth or of the ungodly world
who were not killed by these plagues repented neither of their
irreligious principles nor of their immoral lives. They went on as
they had done in the grossness of their idolatries and in the
licentiousness of their conduct. They were neither awakened nor
softened by the fate of others. They had deliberately chosen their
own course; and, although they knew that they were rushing against
the thick bosses of the Almightys buckler, they had resolved to
persevere in it to the end. Two brief remarks on these six Trumpet
visions, looked at as a whole, appear still to be required.
21. I. No attempt has been made to interpret either the
individual objects of the judgments or the instruments by which
judgment is inflicted. To the one class belong the "earth," the
"trees," the "green grass," the "sea," the "ships," the "rivers and
fountains of the waters," the "sun," the "moon," and the "stars;"
to the other belong the details given in the description first of
the "locusts" of the fifth Trumpet and then of the "horses" of the
sixth. Each of these particulars may have a definite meaning, and
interpreters may yet be successful in discovering it. The object
kept in view throughout this commentary makes any effort to
ascertain that meaning, when it is doubtful if it even exists,
comparatively unimportant. We are endeavoring to catch the broader
interpretation and spirit of the book; and it may be a question
whether our impressions would in that respect be deepened though we
saw; reason to believe that all the objects above mentioned had
individual force. One line of demarcation certainly seems to exist,
traced by the Seer himself, between the first four and the two
following judgments, the former referring to physical disasters
flowing from moral evil, the latter to the more dreadful
intensification of intellectual darkness and moral corruption
visited upon men when they deliberately choose evil rather than
good. Further than this it is for our present purpose unnecessary
to go. 2. The judgments of these Trumpets are judgments on the
world rather than the Church. Occasion has been already taken to
observe that the structure of this part of the Apocalypse leads to
the belief that both the Trumpets and the Bowls are developed out
of the Seals. Yet there is a difference between the two, and
various indications in the Trumpet visions appear to confine them
to judgments on the world. There is the manner in which they are
introduced, as an answer to the prayers of "all the saints."1 It is
true, as we shall yet see, that the degenerate Church is the chief
persecutor of the people of God But against her the saints cannot
pray. To them she is still the Church. They remember the principle
laid down by their Lord when He spoke of His kingdom in the parable
of the tares: "Let both grow together until the harvest."2 God
alone can separate the false from the true within her pale. There
is a sense in which the Church can never be overthrown, and there
is not less a sense in which the world shall be subdued. Only for
the subjugation of the world, therefore, can "all the saints" pray;
and the Trumpets are an answer to their prayers. (1 Rev_8:3; 2
Mat_13:30) Again, the three Woe-Trumpets are directed against "them
that dwell on the earth."* But, as has been already said, it is a
principle of interpretation applicable to all the three series of
the Seals, the Trumpets, and the Bowls, that traits filling up the
picture in one member belong also to the other members of the
groups and that the judgments, while under one aspect seven, are
under another one. The three Woes therefore fall upon the same
field of judgment as that visited by the plagues preceding them. In
other words, all the six plagues of this series of visions are
inflicted upon "them that dwell on the earth;" and that is simply
another form of expression for the ungodly world. (* Rev_8:13)
Again, under the fifth Trumpet the children of God are separated
from the ungodly, so that the particulars of that judgment do not
touch them. The locusts are instructed that they should not hurt
the grass of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any tree;
but only such men as have not the seal of God in their foreheads.*
(* Rev_9:4) Again, the seventh Trumpet, in which the series
culminates, and which embodies its character as a whole, will be
found to deal with judgment on the world alone: "The nations were
roused to wrath, and Thy wrath came, and the time of the dead to be
judged," . . . and "the time to destroy them that destroy the
earth."* (* Rev_11:18) Finally, the description given at the end of
the sixth Trumpet of those who were
22. hardened rather than softened by the preceding judgments
leads directly to the same conclusion: And the rest of mankind
which were not killed by these plagues repented not of the works of
their hands, that they should not worship devils, and the idols of
gold, and of silver, and of brass, and of stone, and of wood.* (*
Rev_9:20) These considerations leave no doubt that the judgments of
the Trumpets are judgments on the world. The Church, it is true,
may also suffer from them, but not in judgment. They may be part of
her trial as she mixes with the world during her earthly
pilgrimage. Trial, however, is not judgment. To the children of God
it is the discipline of a Fathers hand. In the midst of it the
Church is safe, and it helps to ripen her for the fullness of the
glory of her heavenly inheritance. HAWKER, (1) And when he had
opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven about the
space of half an hour. (2) And I saw the seven angels which stood
before God; and to them were given seven trumpets. I pause at the
very entrance on this Chapter, to observe, that the silence which
is said to have been in heaven, by the space of half an hour, at
the opening of the seventh seal, is not to be supposed, (indeed it
cannot be supposed,) as if there was any pause in the presence of
God and the Lamb in heaven. This would not correspond with all the
other accounts in scripture, which are given of that blessed place.
We are told that the glorious multitude, cease not night nor day,
praising God and the Lamb, Rev_4:8. But it is spoken rather of the
Church, which is sometimes, and not unfrequently called heaven, and
the heavenly Jerusalem coming down from heaven, Heb_12:22;
Rev_21:2. And the silence of half an hour, seems only to have been
a short prelude while the Angels were preparing to sound their
trumpets, and the Angel at the altar offered incense. The period of
the history of the Church, which appears to correspond to this
vision, according to the best calculations, seems to have been
towards the close of the reign of Constantine. The Empire was
become Christian in profession, and, as such, might be said to have
peace from Paganism, and this is perhaps represented by silence for
half an hour. But this was only a calm, before a tremendous storm.
For, as soon as the Angels began to sound their trumpets, the awful
persecutions, which arose from intestine wars, and springing out of
damnable errors in doctrine, brought greater evils, than all the
opposition from heathens. MEYER, THE INCENSE OF THE PRAYERS OF
SAINTS Rev_8:1-13 The seventh seal includes the seven trumpets.
What a contrast that pause must have been to the jubilant songs of
the great multitude! In the Jewish temple, we are told, the musical
instruments and chanting resounded during the offering of the
sacrifices, which occupied the first part of the service; but at
the offering of the incense a solemn silence was observed,
Psa_62:1. The people prayed quietly without, at the time of
incense. What a glimpse is here afforded of the intercession of our
great High Priest! The smoke of the incense of His great merit
arises with the prayers of the saints. Pray on, believer, though
your voice be feeble, and so much imperfection mingles with your
efforts to serve God. The incense of Christs intercession is
fragrant enough to make even you acceptable. The four first
trumpets include the devastation of natural objects. The dumb
creation,
23. and even the earth itself, suffers for mans sin. Think of
the horses wounded in battle, dying in long agony; of vast tracks
of country once smiling, with harvest becoming a wilderness; of the
soil compelled to produce the ingredients of poisoning and
intoxication. Poor Mother Earth! Goethe said that he could hear her
sighing as a captive for redemption. KRETZMANN, The narrative at
this point, with all its simplicity, is full of dramatic intensity:
And when He opened the seventh seal, silence reigned in heaven for
about a half-hour. It was a silence of strained expectation, of
breathless suspense. The plagues that were about to be shown in
symbols were the greatest, the most horrible of all, the
tribulations which would strike the Church would be awe-inspiring
in their intensity. It was an ominous period of direst portent.
After the half-hour had elapsed, an activity ensued which prepared
for the coming events: And I saw the seven angels that stand before
God, and to them were given seven trumpets. The use of trumpets is
always associated in Scriptures with important announcements
intended for great multitudes. Here the seven angels are mentioned,
the spirits that were in the immediate service of the Lord, just as
Gabriel calls himself one of those that stand in the presence of
the Lord, Luk_1:19. They were His servants, to carry out His
commands, and the trumpets were given to them in order that they
might be the Lord's heralds. They now stood ready, with their
trumpets at their mouths, waiting for the signal to proclaim doom.
The idea that heaven is a vast temple now again comes to the
foreground: And another angel came and stood next to the altar,
having a golden censer, and to him was given incense in abundance,
that he might add it to the prayers of all the saints on the golden
altar before the throne. Here again everything points to the
solemnity of the occasion. There is no hurry, no confusion: the act
of worship is performed with all the impressiveness of holy
dignity. Many commentators identify this angel with the one great
High Priest of the New Testament, Jesus Christ Himself. Just as the
high priest of the Old Testament took a golden censer to sacrifice
incense in the Most Holy Place, so the prayers of the saints, a
great mass of them, are here pictured as being offered up to God.
This was acceptable to the Lord: And the smoke of the incense arose
with the prayers of the saints out of the hand of the angel before
God. The straight ascent of the smoke of a sacrifice signified that
God looked upon it graciously, that the prayers of the saints met
with His approval, as they are sure to do if made according to His
will, for the sake of the precious merit and the powerful
intercession of the great High Priest and Mediator Jesus Christ.
The last action of the angel was also significant: And the angel
took the censer, and filled it with fire from the altar, and threw
it to the earth; and there occurred thunderings and voices and
lightnings and an earthquake. The fire from the altar is a
manifestation of the sevenfold Spirit in the Word. The proclamation
of this Word is like thunder in shaking hard hearts, like a mighty
voice in penetrating the minds, like lightning in revealing the
innermost recesses of the heart and in working knowledge of divine
things, like an earthquake in working mighty changes, not only in
the heart and mind of the hearers, but in their entire life. These
preliminary acts having taken place, everything was ready for the
sounding of the trumpets: And the seven angels that had the seven
trumpets prepared themselves to trumpet. OTES Some joke here and
say this is proof that there will be no women in heaven, but it can
be reversed and appllied to men as well. But here is the silence
of
24. reverence and suspense. Solumn judgment calls for silence.
"All heaven should stand in breathless silensce, awaiting the peal
of the last trump." It is for dramatic effect as the last seal is
opened. Even praise ceases for this is a sad time of great
judgment. It is a time that even God does not like. Erdman says it
is a pause to catch your breath for the climax of all is about to
begin. It is a breathing space before another shattering
revelation. An hour was the briefiest division of time and so this
half of an hour is like our saying just a brief moment or just a
second. It is a brief intermission in the drams of judgment. One
author says it is a picture of the tranquility and peace of the
church as judgment begins. We now continue with the opening of the
seals which had been interrupted by the interlude of chapter 7. As
the seventh seal was opened there was a great silence in heaven.
Silence in the Old Testament indicates prelude to judgment and that
God was about to act (Zech 2:13; Zeph. 1:7). This silence here in
Revelation makes the vision more impressive. The seven angels which
stood before God were each given a trumpet. They will later in
sequence sound their trumpets and great plagues will come forth.
DAVID RIGGS Some see see the silence as being symbolic of delayed
judgement. Others see it as being for dramatic effect. The hosts of
heaven await anxiously to see what is to come next. What will be
announced next is the question of the heavenly hosts as they wait
is silent expectation. Ray Summers writes, "..it is a period of
trembling suspense, a silence of reverence, expecxtancy, and prayer
in which the heavenly hosts wait in breathless silence for the
pageant to continue. It is not at all improbable that both ideas
are here symbolized-dramatic expectation as judgement is delayed."
BARCLAY, THE SILE CE A D THE THU DER OF PRAYER Rev. 8:1-5 When he
opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven for about half
an hour. And I saw the seven angels who stand in the presence of
God, and seven trumpets were given to them. Another angel came and
stood at the altar with a golden censer; and he was given much
incense that he might add it to the prayers of the saints on the
golden altar before the throne. The smoke of the incense went up
with the prayers of the saints from the hand of the angel before
God. And the angel took the censer and filled it with fire from the
altar, and threw it on the ground. And there were crashes of
thunder and loud voices and flashes of lightning and an earthquake.
Before we begin to examine this passage in detail, we may note one
point about its arrangement. Rev. 8:2, which tells of the seven
angels with the seven trumpets, is clearly out of place. As it
stands, it interrupts the sense of the passage and it should come
immediately before Rev. 8:7--probably a copyist's mistake.
25. The passage begins with an intensely dramatic silence in
heaven for about half an hour. The sheer stillness is even more
effective than the thunder and the lightning. This silence may have
two meanings. (i) It may be a kind of breathing-space in the
narrative, a moment of preparation before