Bible Commentary

Revelation 11:7

The Pulpit Commentary on Revelation 11:7

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

And when they shall have finished their testimony. This is a difficult passage. How can the Church's testimony be said to be finished while the earth still exists? The explanation seems to lie in the words of our Lord, "When the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?"

(). Christians are forewarned that, as the ages roll on, faith will wane. Though the Church be apparently destroyed, she is not really dead, but will rise again. As our Lord, after finishing his testimony, completed his work by his death and subsequent ascension, so the time will come when the Church shall have Completed all that is necessary, by offering to the world her testimony, and shall then be so completely rejected as to appear dead.

Her enemies will rejoice, but their time of rejoicing is cut short (see below). After three and a half days comes her vindication, and her enemies are struck with consternation; for it is the end, and they have no further opportunities for repentance.

Thus Heugstenberg says, "They shall only be overcome when they have finished their testimony, when God has no further need for their service, when their death can produce more fruit than their life."

The beast that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit shall make war against them, and shall overcome them, and kill them; the beast that cometh up out of the abyss. The article points to the beast which is described elsewhere in the Apocalypse (; ), and which is mentioned here by proleipsis.

"The fourth beast," which is read in A, may have been suggested by . א has "the beast which then cometh up." The beast is Satan, perhaps manifested in the form of the persecuting world power (see on ).

His nature is indicated by the use of the noun θηρίον, "a wild beast," the opposite, as Wordsworth says, of ἀρνίον, the Lamb. The beast ascends out of the abyss for a brief reign upon the earth, and is "drunken with the blood of the saints," as described in .

, but he ascends only to go into perdition (). It is well to remember that the whole vision is symbolical. The intention is to convey the idea that the Church, in her witness for God, will experience opposition from the power of Satan, which will wax more and more formidable as time goes on, and result in the apparent triumph of the forces of evil.

But the triumph will be brief; it will but usher in the end and the final subjugation of the devil.

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