[12] Therefore rejoice,
ye heavens, and ye that dwell in them. Woe to the inhabiters of the earth
and of the sea! for the devil is come down unto you, having great wrath,
because he knoweth that he hath but a short time.
Woe to the earth and the sea - This is the fourth and
last denunciation of the third woe, the most grievous of all. The first
was only, the second chiefly, on the earth, Asia; the third, both on the
earth and the sea, Europe. The earth is mentioned first, because it began
in Asia, before the beast brought it on Europe. He knoweth he hath but
a little time - Which extends from his casting out of heaven to his being
cast into the abyss.
We are now come to a most important period of time. The
non - chronos hastens to an end. We live in the little time wherein Satan
hath great wrath; and this little time is now upon the decline. We are
in the "time, times, and half a time," wherein the woman is "fed in the
wilderness;" yea, the last part of it, "the half time," is begun. We are,
as will be shown, towards the close of the "forty - two months" of the
beast; and when his number is fulfilled, grievous things will be. Let him
who does not regard the being seized by the wrath of the devil; the falling
unawares into the general temptation; the being borne away, by the most
dreadful violence, into the worship of the beast and his image, and, consequently,
drinking the unmixed wine of the wrath of God, and being tormented day
and night for ever and ever in the lake of fire and brimstone; let him
also who is confident that he can make his way through all these by his
own wisdom and strength, without need of any such peculiar preservative
as the word of this prophecy affords; let him, I say, go hence. But let
him who does not take these warnings for senseless outcries, and blind
alarms, beg of God, with all possible earnestness, to give him his heavenly
light herein.
God has not given this prophecy, in so solemn a manner,
only to show his providence over his church, but also that his servants
may know at all times in what particular period they are. And the more
dangerous any period of time is, the greater is the help which it affords.
But where may we fix the beginning and end of the little time? which is
probably four - fifths of a chronos, or somewhat above 888 years. This,
which is the time of the third woe, may reach from 947, to the year 1836.
For,
-
The short interval of the second woe, (which woe ended in
the year 840,) and the 777 years of the woman, which began about the year
847, quickly after which followed the war in heaven, fix the beginning
not long after 864: and thus the third woe falls in the tenth century,
extending from 900 to 1000; called the dark, the iron, the unhappy age.
-
If we compare the length of the third woe with the period
of time which succeeds it in the twentieth chapter, it is but a little
time to that vast space which reaches from the beginning of the non - chronos
to the end of the world.
[13] And when the dragon saw
that he was cast unto the earth, he persecuted the woman which brought
forth the man child.
And when the dragon saw - That be could no longer accuse
the saints in heaven, he turned his wrath to do all possible mischief on
earth. He persecuted the woman - The ancient persecutions of the church
were mentioned, Revelation 1:9, 2:10, 7:14; but this persecution came afterher
flight, verse 6, Revelation 12:6 , , , , eginning of the third woe. Accordingly,
in the tenth and eleventh centuries, thechurch was furiously persecuted
by several heathen powers. In Prussia, king Adelbert was killed in the
year 997, king Brunus in 1008; and when king Stephen encouraged Christianity
in Hungary, he met with violent opposition. After his death, the heathens
in Hungary set themselves to root it out, and prevailed for several years.
About the same time, the army of the emperor, Henry the Third, was totally
overthrown by the Vandals. These, and all the accounts of those times,
show with what fury the dragon then persecuted the woman.
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