[8] And I looked, and behold
a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed
with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth,
to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts
of the earth.
And I saw, and behold a pale horse - Suitable to pale
death, his rider. And hades - The representative of the state of separate
souls. Followeth even with him - The four first seals concern living men.
Death therefore is properly introduced. Hades is only occasionally mentioned
as a companion of death. So the fourth seal reaches to the borders of things
invisible, which are comprised in the three last seals. And power was given
to him over the fourth part of the earth - What came single and in a lower
degree before, comes now together, and much more severely. The first seal
brought victory with it: in the second was "a great sword;" but here a
scimitar. In the third was moderate dearth; here famine, and plague, and
wild beasts beside. And it may well be, that from the time of Trajan downwards,
the fourth part of men upon the earth, that is, within the Roman empire,
died by sword, famine, pestilence, and wild beasts. "At that time," says
Aurelius Victor, "the Tyber overflowed much more fatally than under Nerva,
with a great destruction of houses and there was a dreadful earthquake
through many provinces, and a terrible plague and famine, and many places
consumed by fire." By death - That is, by pestilence wild beasts have,
at several times, destroyed abundance of men; and undoubtedly there was
given them, at this time, an uncommon fierceness and strength. It is observable
that war brings on scarcity, and scarcity pestilence, through want of wholesome
sustenance; and pestilence, by depopulating the country, leaves the few
survivors an easier prey to the wild beasts. And thus these judgments make
way for one another in the order wherein they are here represented.
What has been already observed may be a fourfold proof
that the four horsemen, as with their first entrance in the reign of Trajan,
(which does by no means exhaust the contents of the four first seals,)
so with all their entrances in succeeding ages, and with the whole course
of the world and of visible nature, are in all ages subject to Christ,
subsisting by his power, and serving his will, against the wicked, and
in defence of the righteous. Herewith, likewise, a way is paved for the
trumpets which regularly succeed each other; and the whole prophecy, as
to what is future, is confirmed by the clear accomplishment of this part
of it.
[9] And when he had opened the
fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of them that were slain for
the word of God, and for the testimony which they held:
And when he opened the fifth seal - As the four former
seals, so the three latter, have a close connexion with each other. These
all refer to the invisible world; the fifth, to the happy dead, particularly
the martyrs; the sixth, to the unhappy; the seventh, to the angels, especially
those to whom the trumpets are given. And I saw - Not only the church warring
under Christ, and the world warring under Satan; but also the invisible
hosts, both of heaven and hell, are described in this book. And it not
only describes the actions of both these armies upon earth; but their respective
removals from earth, into a more happy or more miserable state, succeeding
each other at several times, distinguished by various degrees, celebrated
by various thanksgivings; and also the gradual increase of expectation
and triumph in heaven, and of terror and misery in hell. Under the altar
- That is, at the foot of it. Two altars are mentioned in the Revelation,
"the golden altar" of incense, Revelation 9:13; and the altar of burnt
- offerings, mentioned here,and Revelation 8:5, 14:18, 16:7. At this the
souls of the martyrs now prostrate themselves. By and by their blood shall
be avenged upon Babylon; but not yet, whence it appears that the plagues
in the fourth seal do not concern Rome in particular.
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