Revelation Chapter 10 - (Excerpts from Daniel and Revelation by Uriah
Smith 1897)
p 518 -- VERSE 1.
And I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven, clothed with a cloud: and
a rainbow was upon his head, and his face was as it were the sun, and his feet
as pillars of fire. 2. And he had in his hand a little book open:
and he set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the earth.
In this scripture we
have another instance in which the consecutive line of thought is for a time
interrupted; and this chapter comes in as -
A Parenthetical
Prophecy. - Chapter 9 closed with the events of the sixth trumpet. The sounding
of the seventh trumpet is not introduced until we reach the 15th verse of
chapter 11. The whole of chapter 10 and a portion of chapter 11, therefore,
come in parenthetically between the sixth and seventh trumpets. That which is
particularly connected with the sounding of the sixth trumpet is recorded in
chapter 9. The prophet has other events to introduce before the opening of
another trumpet, and takes occasion to do it in the scripture which intervenes
to the 15th verse of chapter 11. Among these is the prophecy of chapter 10. Let
us first look at the chronology of the message of this angel.
The Little Book. -
"He had in his hand a little book open." There is a necessary
inference to be drawn from this language, which is, that this book was at some
time closed up. We read in Daniel of a book which was closed up and sealed to a
certain time: "But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book,
even to the time of the end: many shall run to and fro,
p 519 --
(picture omitted)
p 520 -- and
knowledge shall be increased." Dan. 12:4. Since this book was closed up
only till the time of the end, it follows that at the time of the end the book
would be opened; and as this closing was mentioned in prophecy, it would be but
reasonable to expect that in the predictions of events to take place at the
time of the end, the opening of this book would also be mentioned. There is no
book spoken of as closed up and sealed except the book of Daniel's prophecy;
and there is no account of the opening of that book, unless it be here in the
10th of Revelation. We see, furthermore, that in both places the contents
ascribed to the book are the same. The book which Daniel had directions to
close up and seal had reference to time: "How long shall it be to the end
of these wonders?" And when the angel of this chapter comes down with the
little book open, on which he bases his proclamation, he gives a message in
relation to time: "Time shall be no longer." Nothing more could be
required to show that both expressions refer to one book, and to prove that the
little book which the angel had in his hand open, was the book of the prophecy
of Daniel.
An important point
is now determined toward settling the chronology of this angel; for we have
seen that the prophecy, more particularly the prophetic periods of Daniel, were
not to be opened till the time of the end; and if this is the book which the angel
had in his hand open, it follows that he proclaims his message this side of the
time when the book should be opened, or somewhere this side of the commencement
of the time of the end. All that now remains on this point is to ascertain when
the time of the end commenced; and the book of Daniel itself furnishes data
from which this can be done. In Daniel 11, from verse 30, the papal power is
brought to view. In verse 35 we read, "And some of them of understanding
shall fall, to try them, and to purge, and make them white, even to the time of
the end." Here is brought to view the period of the supremacy of the
little horn, during which time the saints, times, and laws were to be given
into his hand, and from him suffer fearful persecutions. This is declared to
reach to the time of the end. It ended A. D. 1798, where the
p 521 -- 1260 years
of papal rule expired. There the time of the end commenced, and the book was
opened. And since that time, many have run to and fro, and knowledge on these
prophetic subjects has marvelously increased.
The chronology of
the events of Revelation 10 is further ascertained from the fact that this
angel is identical with the first angel of Revelation 14. The points of
identity between them are easily seen:
(1) They both have a special
message to proclaim; (2) they both utter their proclamation with a
loud voice; (3) they both use similar language, referring to
the great Creator as the maker of heaven and earth, the sea, and the things
that are therein; and (4) they both proclaim time, one swearing that
time should be no more, and the other proclaiming that the hour of God's
judgment has come. But the message of Rev. 14:6 is located this side of the
commencement of the time of the end. It is a proclamation of the hour of God's
judgment come, and hence must have its application in the last generation. Paul
did not preach the hour of judgment come. Luther and his coadjutors did not
preach it. Paul reasoned of a judgment to come, indefinitely future; and Luther
plaecd it at least three hundred years off from his day. Moreover, Paul warns
the church against any such preaching as that the hour of God's judgment has
come, until a certain time. In 2 Thess. 2:1-3, he says: "Now we beseech
you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering
together unto him, that ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither
by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us, as that the day of Christ is
at hand. Let no man deceive you by any means; for that day shall not come,
except there come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the
son of perdition," etc. Here Paul introduces to our view the man of sin,
the little horn, the papacy, and covers with a caution the whole period of his
supremacy, which, as already noticed, continued 1260 years, ending in 1798. In
1798, therefore, the restriction against proclaiming the day of Christ at hand
ceased; in 1798, the time of the end commenced, and the seal was taken from the
little book. Since that period, therefore, the angel of Revelation 14 has gone
p 522 --
(picture omitted)
p 523 -- forth
proclaiming the hour of God's judgment come; and it is since that time, too,
that the angel of chapter 10 has taken his stand on sea and land, and sworn
that time shall be no more. Of their identity there can now be no question; and
all the arguments which go to locate the one, are equally effective in the case
of the other. We need not enter into any argument here to show that the present
generation is witnessing the fulfilment of these two prophecies. In the
preaching of the advent, more especially from 1840 to 1844, began their full
and circumstantial accomplishment. The position of this angel, one foot upon
the sea and the other on the land, denotes the wide extent of his proclamation
by sea and by land. Had this message been designed for only one country, it
would have been sufficient for the angel to take his position on the land only.
But he has one foot upon the sea, from which we may infer that his message
would cross the ocean, and extend to the various nations and divisions of the
globe; and this inference is strengthed by the fact that the Advent
proclamation, above referred to, did go to every missionary station in the
world. More on this under chapter 14.
VERSE 3. And cried
with a loud voice, as when a lion roareth: and when he had cried, seven
thunders uttered their voices. 4. And when the seven thunders had uttered
their voices, I was about to write: and I heard a voice from heaven saying unto
me, Seal up those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write them not.
The Seven Thunders.
- It would be vain to speculate to any great length upon the seven thunders, in
hope of gaining a definite knowledge of what they uttered. We must acquiesce in
the directions given to John concerning them, and leave them where he left
them, sealed up, unwritten, and consequently to us unknown. There is, however,
a conjecture extant in relation to them, which may not inappropriatey be
mentioned here. It is that what the seven thunders uttered is the experience of
the Adventists engaged in that movement, embracing their sore disappointment
and trial. Something, evidently, was uttered which it would not be well for the
church to know; and for God to have given an inspired record of the Advent
movement in advance, would have been simply
p 524 -- to defeat
that movement, which we verily believe was in all its particulars an
accomplishment of his purposes, and according to his will. Why, then, any
mention of the seven thunders at all? Following out the above noticed
conjecture, the conclusion would be that we, having met in our history with
sudden, mysterious, and unexpected events, as startling and strange as thunders
from an unclouded sky, might not give up in utter perplexity, inferring, as we
may, that all is in the order and providence of God, since something of this
nature was sealed up, and hidden from the church.
VERSE 5. And the
angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the earth lifted up his hand to
heaven, 6. And sware by him that liveth forever and
ever, who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and
the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein,
that there should be time no longer.
Time No Longer. -
What is the meaning of this most solemn declaration? It cannot mean that with
the message of this angel, time, as computed in this world, in comparison with
eternity, should end; for the next verse speaks of the days of the voice of the
seventh angel; and chapter 11:15-19 gives us some of the events to take place
under this trumpet, which transpire in the present state. And it cannot mean
probationary time; for that does not cease till Christ closes his work as
priest, which is not till after the seventh angel has commenced to sound. Rev.
11:15, 19; 15:5-8. It must therefore mean prophetic time; for there is no other
to which it can refer. Prophetic time shall be no more - not that time should
never be used in a prophetic sense; for the "days of the voice of the
seventh angel," spoken of immediately after, doubtless mean the years of
the seventh angel; but no prophetic period should extend beyond this message;
those that reach to the latest point would all close there. Arguments on the
prophetic periods, showing that the longest ones did not extend beyond the
autumn of 1844, will be found in remarks on Dan. 8:14.
VERSE 7 But in the
days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the
mystery of God should be finished, as he hath declared to his servants the
prophets.
p 525 -- The Days of
the Voice of the Seventh Angel. - This seventh trumpet is not that which is
spoken of in 1 Cor. 15:52 as the last trump, which wakes the sleeping dead; but
it is the seventh of the series of the seven trumpets, and like the others of
this series, occupies days (years) in sounding. In the days when he shall begin
to sound, the mystery of God shall be finished. Not in the day when he shall
begin to sound, not in the very commencement of his sounding, but in the early
years of his sounding, the mystery of God shall be finished.
Commencement of the
Seventh Trumpet. - From the events to take place under the sounding of the
seventh trumpet, its commencement may be located with sufficient definiteness
at the close of the prophetic periods in 1844. Not many years from that date,
then, the mystery of God is to be finished. The great event, whatever it is, is
right upon us. Some closing and decisive work, with whatever of importance and
solemnity it bears in its train, is near at hand. There is an importance
connected with the finishing of any of the works of God. Such an act marks a
solemn and important era. Our Saviour, when expiring upon the cross, cried,
"It is finished" (John 19:30); and when the great work of mercy for
fallen man is completed, it will be announced by a voice from the throne of
God, proclaiming, in tones which roll like thunder through all the earth, the
solemn sentence, "It is done!" Rev. 16:17. It is therefore no
uncalled-for solicitude which prompts us to inquire what bearing such events
have upon our eternal hopes and interests; and, when we read of the finishing
of the mystery of God, to ask what that mystery is, and in what its finishing
consists.
The Mystery of God.
- A few direct testimonies from that Book which has been given as a lamp to our
feet, will show what this mystery is. Eph. 1:9, 10: "Having made known
unto us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure which he hath purposed
in himself: that in the dispensation or the fulness of times he might gather
together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are
on earth; even in him." Here God's purpose to gather together all in
Christ is called the "mystery" of his will. This is accomplished
p 526 -- through the
gospel. Eph. 6:19 "And for me [Paul asks that prayers be made], that
utterance may be given unto me, that I may open my mouth boldly, to make known
the mystery of the gospel." Here the gospel is declared plainly to be a
mystery. It is called in Col. 4:3, the mystery of Christ. Eph. 3:3, 6:
"How that by revelation he made known unto me the mystery (as I wrote
afore in few words)," etc., "that the Gentiles should be fellow
heirs, and of the same body, and partakers of his promise in Christ by the
gospel." Paul here declares that the mystery was made known to him by
revelation, as he had before written. In this he refers to his Epistle to the
Galatians, where he recorded what had been given him "by revelation,"
in these words: "But I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was
preached of me is not after man; for I neither received it of man, neither was
I taught it, but by the revelation of Jesus Christ." Gal. 1:11, 12. Here
Paul tells us plainly that what he received through revelation was the gospel.
In Eph. 3:3, he calls it the mystery made known to him by revelation, as he had
written before. The Epistle to the Galatians was written in A. D. 58, and that
to the Ephesians in A. D. 64.
In view of these
testimonies, few will be disposed to deny that the mystery of God is the
gospel. It is the same, then, as if the angel had declared, In the days of the
voice of the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the gospel shall be
finished. But what is the finishing of the gospel? Let us first inquire for
what it was given. It was given to take out from the nations a people for God's
name. Acts 15:14. Its finishing must, as a matter of course, be the close of
this work. It will be finished when the number of God's people is made up,
mercy ceases to be offered, and probation closes.
The subject is now
before us in all its magnitude. Such is the momentous work to be accomplished
in the early days of the voice of the seventh angel, whose trumpet notes have
been reverberating through the world since the memorable epoch of 1844. God is not
slack; his work is not uncertain; are we ready for the issue?
p 527 -- VERSE 8.
And the voice which I heard from heaven spake unto me again, and said, Go and
take the little book which is open in the hand of the angel which standeth upon
the sea and upon the earth. 9. And I went unto the angel, and said unto
him, Give me the little book. And he said unto me, Take it, and eat it up; and
it shall make thy belly bitter, but it shall be in thy mouth sweet as honey. 10.
And I took the little book out of the angel's hand, and ate it up; and
it was in my mouth sweet as honey: and as soon as I had eaten it, my belly was
bitter.
In verse 8, John
himself is brought in to act a part as a representative of the church, probably
on acount of the succeeding peculiar experience of the church, which the Lord
of the prophecy would cause to be put on record, but which could not well be presented
under the symbol of an angel. When only a straightforward proclamation is
brought to view, without including the peculiar experience which the church is
to pass through in connection therewith, angels may be used as symbols to
represent the religious teachers who proclaim that message, as in Revelation
14; but when some particular experience of the church is to be presented, the
case is manifestly different. This could most appropriately be set forth in the
person of some member of the human family; hence John is himself called upon to
act a part in this symbolic representation. And this being the case, the angel
who here appeared to John may represent that divine messenger, who, in the
order which is observed in all the work of God, has charge of this message; or
he may be introduced for the purpose of representing the nature of the message,
and the source from which it comes.
There are not a few
now living who have in their own experience met a striking fulfilment of these
verses, in the joy with which they received the message of Christ's immediate
second coming, the honey-like sweetness of the precious truths then brought out,
and the sadness and pain that followed, when at the appointed time in 1844 the
Lord did not come, but a great disappointment did. A mistake had been made
which apparently involved the integrity of the little book they had been
eating. What had been so like honey to their taste, suddenly became like
wormwood and gall. But those who had patience
p 528 -- to endure,
so to speak, the digesting process, soon learned that the mistake was only in
the event, not in the time, and that what the angel had given them was not unto
death, but to their nourishment and support. (See the same facts brought to view
under a similar figure in Jer. 15:16-18.)
VERSE 11. And he
said unto me, Thou must prophesy again before many peoples, and nations, and
tongues, and kings.
John, standing as
the representative of the church, here receives from the angel another
commission. Another message is to go forth after the time when the first and
second messages, as leading proclamations, ceased. In other words, we have here
a prophecy of the third angel's message, now, as we believe, in process of
fulfilment. Neither will this work be done in a corner; for it is to go before
"many peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings." (See chapter
14.)
*******
By the grace of God
may we continue to read and be blessed, to keep and be blessed, to understand
as the Holy Spirit would have us understand. All in the love of our Savior,
Jesus Christ, our Lord.
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