Use AI to Search The Blog

Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Revelation 21 as an excerpt from Bible Hub and Logos as found in the Expositors Greek Testament Edited by Nicoll

Expositor's Greek Testament

And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea.
the prelude to the last vision.

The title: Revelation 21:1 a b = Revelation 20:11 c. 1 c = Revelation 20:13 a. The absence of the sea from John’s ideal universe is due not to any Semitic horror of the ocean, nor to its association with Rome (Revelation 13:1), nor to the ancient idea of its dividing effect (“mare dissociabile,” “the unplumbed, salt, estranging sea,”), but to its mythological connexion with the primitive dragon-opponent of God, the last trace of whom is now obliterated. cf. Sib. ver. 159, 160, 447 (ἔσται δʼ ὑστατίῳ καιρῷ ξηρὸς πότε πόντος), Ass. Mos. x. 6, 4 Esd. 6:24, Test. Levi 4, etc., for this religious antipathy to the treacherous, turbulent element of water. “La mer est une annulation, une stérilization d’une partie de la terre, un reste du chaos primitif, souvent un chatiment de Dieu” (Renan, 449). Plutarch (de Iside, 7 f., 32) preserves the Egyptian sacred tradition that the sea was no part of nature (παρωρισμένην) but an alien element (ἀλλοῖον περίττωμα), full of destruction and disease. The priests of Isis (32) shunned it as impure and unsocial for swallowing up the sacred Nile. One favourite tradition made the sea disappear in the final conflagration of the world (R. J. 289), but John ignores this view. The world is to end as it began, with creation; only it is a new creation, with a perfect paradise, and no thwarting evil (Barn. vi. 13). His omission of the ocean is simply due to the bad associations of the abyss as the abode of Tehom or Tiâmat (cf. Oesterley’s Evol. of Messianic Idea, 79 f., G. A. Smith’s Jerusalem, i. 71 f., and Hastings’ D. B. iv. 194, 195).

And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.
ἐκ=origin, ἀπὸ = originator. This conception of the new Jerusalem as messiah’s bride in the latter days is an original touch, added by the prophet to the traditional Jewish material (cf. Volz, 336 f.). In 4 Esd. 6:26 (Lat. Syr.) “the bride shall appear, even the city coming forth, and she shall be seen who is now hidden from the earth”; but this precedes the 400 years of bliss, at the close of which messiah dies. In En. xc. 28 f. a new and better house is substituted for the old, while in 4 Esd. 9–11. the mourning mother rather suddenly becomes “a city builded” with large foundations (i.e., Zion). These partial anticipations lend some colour to Dalman’s plea that the conception of a pre-existent heavenly Jerusalem was extremely limited in Judaism, and that John’s vision is to be isolated from the other N.T. hints (see reff.). For a fine application of the whole passage, see Ecce Homo, ch. 24. The vision conveys Christian hope and comfort in terms of a current and ancient religious tradition upon the new Jerusalem (cf. Charles on Apoc. Bar. iv. 3). The primitive form of this conception, which lasted in various phases down to the opening of the second century, was that the earthly Jerusalem simply needed to be purified in order to become the fit and final centre of the messianic realm with its perfect communion between God and man (cf. Isaiah 60; Isaiah 54:11Tob 13:16-17, Ezekiel 40-48, En. x. 16–19, xxv. 1, Ps. Sol. 17:25, 33, Ap. Bar. xxix, xxxix.–xl, lxxii, lxxiv, 4 Esd. 7:27–30, 12:32–34, etc.). But alongside of this, especially after the religious revival under the Maccabees, ran the feeling that the earthly Jerusalem was too stained and secular to be a sacred city; its heavenly counterpart, pure and pre-existent, must descend (so here, after En. xc. 28, 29, Ap. Bar. xxxii. 3, 4, Test. Daniel 5, etc.). In rabbinic theology, the vision of the heavenly Jerusalem was taken from Adam after his lapse, but shown as a special favour to Abraham, Jacob and Moses (cf. Ap. Bar. iv). The Christian prophet John not only sees it but sees it realised among Christian people—a brave and significant word of prophecy, in view of his age and surroundings.

And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God.
σκην. (chosen on account of its “assonance with the Hebrew to express the Shekinah,” Dr. Taylor on Pirke Aboth iii. 3) is the real tabernacle (Hebrews 8:2Hebrews 9:11). The whole meaning and value of the new Jerusalem lies in the presence of God (En. xlv. 6, lxii. 14, Test. Judges 1:25, etc.) with men which it guarantees. The O.T. promises are realised (see reff.); God is accessible, and men are consoled with eternal comfort (cf. Enoch 10:22, καὶ καθαρισθήσεται πᾶσα ἡ γῆ ἀπὸ παντὸς μιάμματος καὶ ἀπὸ πάσης ἀκαθαρσίας καὶ ὀργῆς καὶ μάστιγος). If we were to read the passage in the light of Isaiah 61:3-10, the tears wiped away would signify that the penitents were newly espoused to the Lord; but the context here implies tears of grief and pain, not of repentance. “There shall be no more labour, nor sickness, nor sorrow, nor anxiety, nor need, nor night, nor darkness, but a great light” (Slav. En. lxv. 9).

And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.
And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all things new. And he said unto me, Write: for these words are true and faithful.
The first and only time that God addresses the seer, or indeed (apart from Revelation 1:8) speaks at all. The almost unbroken silence assigned to God in the Apocalypse corresponds to the Egyptian idea of the divine Reason needing no tongue but noiselessly directing mortal things by righteousness (Plut. de Iside, 75; hence the deity is symbolised by the ciocodile, which was believed to be the only animal without a tongue).

And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely.
“Tis done, all is over” (sc. οὗτοι οἱ λόγοι or πάντα). The perfecting of God’s work is followed, as in Isaiah 54-56, by a liberal promise of satisfaction to all spiritual desire, and the three ideas of consolation, eternal refreshment, and Divine fellowship are thus conjoined as in Revelation 7:14-17. Compare the fontal passage in Philo, de migrat Abr. § 6 πηγὴ δὲἀφʼ ἧς ὀμβρεῖ τὸ ἀγαθάἡ τοῦ φιλοδώρου Θεοῦ σύνοδός ἐστινοὗ χάριν ἐπισφραγιζόμενος τὰ τῶν εὐεργεσιῶν φησινΕσομαι μετὰ σοῦ. The promise implies (like Isaiah 44:3, not Isaiah 55:1) that thirst is accompanied by readiness and eagerness to accept the boon, which is free (6) and full (πάντα) and filial (Revelation 21:7). The thirst fox God is opposed to the unbelief and vice which quench it, just as the victorious life is contrasted with the craven spirit which shrinks from the hardships and demands of faith. Similarly the life of strenuous obedience now enters on its majority; it comes into an estate of filial confidence to the great God, bestowed on all who acquit themselves nobly in their probation. By a rare touch (since Revelation 3:22) in the Apocalypse, the individual Christian is singled out. Usually the writer is interested in the general body of Christians. Here, however, as in 2–3, religious individualism aptly follows the idea of personal promise and encouragement (cf. Revelation 22:17), as afterwards of judgment (Revelation 22:11-12).

He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be his God, and he shall be my son.
These boons (Revelation 21:3-7), however, are reserved for the loyal; the third (son of God) was a title applied to Augustus and the emperors generally throughout the Greek and Roman world. κληρονομήσει (here only in Apoc.) in general sense = “enter into possession of,” “partake of”. (“This place” of bliss “is prepared for the righteous who endure every kind of attack in their lives from those who afflict their souls … for them this place is prepared as an eternal inheritance,” Slav. En. ix.). This is the sole allusion, and a purely incidental one, to that central conception of the messianic bliss as a κληρονομία, which bulks so prominently in apocalypses like Fourth Esdras and is employed in a cosmic sense by Paul as lordship over the whole creation (see Bacon, Biblical and Semitic Studies, Yale Univ. 1902, pp. 240 f.). The solitary allusion to sonship expresses the close relation to God for which this writer elsewhere prefers to use the metaphor of priesthood. Partly owing to the bent of his mind, partly owing to the stern circumstances of his age, he (like Clem. Rom.) allows the majesty and mystery of God to overshadow that simple and close confidence which Jesus inculcated towards the Father (Titius, 13, 14), as also the direct love of God for his people (only in Revelation 3:9Revelation 3:19Revelation 20:9).

But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second death.
The reverse side of the picture (cf. Revelation 20:12-15 and below on Revelation 21:27): a black list of those who have not conquered. δειλοῖς = “cowards” or apostates, who deny Christ in the persecution and worship Caesar (Introd. § 6) through fear of suffering; “δειλία does not of course itself allow that it is timorous, but would shelter its timidity under the more honourable title of εὐλάβεια” (Trench, Synonyms, § x.). It embraces further all those who draw back under the general strain of ridicule and social pressure (Hebrews 6:4-82 Timothy 4:16, etc.), like Bunyan’s Pliable, but unlike his Mr. Fearing (cf. 1Ma 3:16).—ἀπίστοις not = incredulous (so e.g., Dittenberger’s Sylloge, 80232, 3 cent. B.C.) but, as in Luke 12:46 (cf. Sir. ii. 12 f.), = “faithless,” untrustworthy, those who are not πιστός (Revelation 1:5Revelation 2:10Revelation 2:132 Timothy 2:13). All δειλοί are ἄπιστοι (cf. Introd. § 6), but not all ἄπιστοι are δειλοί. There are more reasons for disloyalty to Christ than cowardice, and some of these are hinted at in the following words, which suggest that ἄπιστοι includes the further idea of immorality (as in Titus 1:15-16, where it is grouped with βδελυκτοί). Lack of faith is denounced also in Apoc. Bar. liv. 21, 4 Ezra 9:7, etc. ἐβδελυγμένοις for βδελυκτοῖς (as εὐλογημένος for εὐλογητός, etc., cf. Field on Galatians 2:11; Simcox, Lang. N.T. 128, 129), “detestable” because “defiled and fouled” by the impurities of the pagan cults (Revelation 17:4Revelation 18:3, etc.; cf. Hosea 9:10; Slav. En. x. 4) including unnatural vice. Murder (and fornication, Jam 2:11) in the popular religions of the ancient world caused ritual impurity and disqualified for access to God, unless atoned for.—φαρμακοῖς = “poisoners” or “sorcerers” (Revelation 22:15), cf. Daniel 2:27 LXX, and above on Revelation 9:21, where (as here and in Galatians 5:21) witchcraft or magic is bracketed with idolatry. Idolaters, in Apoc. Pet. 18, have a special place πλείστου πυρὸς γέμωνψευδέσιν = “liars,” primarily recreant Christians who deny their faith and Lord, or worship false gods (Romans 1:25); but also untruthful Christians who cheat (Acts 5:3) and lie to one another (Colossians 3:9cf. Revelation 14:5); further perhaps to be taken in its general ethical sense (Slav. En. xlii. 13; cf. Did. Revelation 5:2) = Oriental duplicity.—τοῖς δὲ: as in LXX, the subject of the principal clause is thrown forward into the dative (Viteau, ii. 41, 42). The special standpoint of the Apoc. renders the terms of exclusion rather narrower than elsewhere (cf. Volz, 313). Thus there is no allusion to sins of omission, especially as regards justice and kindness between man and man (as Slav. En. x., xlii. 8–9, Matthew 25:41 f.—the former apocalypse finely excluding from heaven all guilty of “evil thoughts” and magic, all harsh or callous men, and finally all idolaters). The parallels with the rest of the Apocalypse, as well as the general style, indicate that Revelation 21:1-8 comes from the pen of the prophet himself; there is no evidence sufficient to support the conjecture that Revelation 21:5-8 is a Christian editor’s gloss in a Jewish original (Vischer, von Soden, S. Davidson, Rauch = Revelation 21:6-8, Spitta). The catalogue of vices, not unparalleled in ethnic literature (cf. Dieterich, pp. 163 f., 174 f., Heinrici on 2 Corinthians 6:4 f.), diverges from those of Revelation 9:20-21 and Revelation 22:15. The second agrees with Sap. 14:22–28 in making idolatry the fontal vice, and with Did. v in putting theft after πορνεία (cf. Hebrews 13:4-5Ephesians 5:5, etc.). Paul, again, invariably starts with the blighting touch of πορνεία or ἀκαθαρσία (cf. Seeberg’s Catechismus d. Urc. 9–29, and von Dobschütz, pp. 406 f.) as in Revelation 22:15. No special significance attaches to the lists of the Apocalypse beyond the obviously appropriate selection of idolatry (Revelation 9:20) as the outstanding vice of paganism, with cowardice (Revelation 21:8) as the foil to victorious confession (Revelation 21:7Revelation 2:13Revelation 2:17Revelation 15:2); note the division of Revelation 22:15 into the repulsive or filthy (first three) and the wicked (second three), corresponding to Revelation 22:11. The κύνες of Revelation 22:15 roughly answer to the “abominable” of Revelation 21:8Revelation 21:1-8 are a summary of what follows: Revelation 21:1-2 = Revelation 21:9-21Revelation 21:3-4 = Revelation 21:22 to Revelation 22:5Revelation 21:5-8 = Revelation 22:16-21.

Revelation 21:9 to Revelation 22:5 : the new Jerusalem (resuming the thought of Revelation 21:2cf. Revelation 19:7), corresponding to the new universe (Revelation 21:1). The fall of Jerusalem accentuated the tendency to rise from the expectation of a new or renovated city on earth to the hope of a heavenly, transcendent city (cf. Apoc. Bar. iv. 2–6, etc.), though the passionate desire for a restoration of city and temple in the messianic age was still strong (cf. R. J. 226 f., Volz, 334 f.). John introduces the definitely Christian identification of the heavenly Jerusalem with the bride of the messiah, and combines the various features of a renovated, a heavenly, and a pre-existent city—features which occasionally reflect the mythological background of such earlier ideas in Judaism. The whole conception, if not the passage itself, is satirised by Lucian (Vera Hist. ii.) in his account of the golden city with its emerald wall, its river, and the absence of night, to say nothing of vines δωδεκαφόροι καὶ κατὰ μῆνα ἕκαστον καρποφοροῦσινRevelation 21:11-21 describe the exterior, Revelation 21:22-27 the interior.

And there came unto me one of the seven angels which had the seven vials full of the seven last plagues, and talked with me, saying, Come hither, I will shew thee the bride, the Lamb's wife.
And he carried me away in the spirit to a great and high mountain, and shewed me that great city, the holy Jerusalem, descending out of heaven from God,
A fresh vision, marked by a new transport of ecstasy (cf. Ezekiel 3:14Ezekiel 11:1, etc.).—ὄρος, the vantage-ground of elevation from which the seer views the site and buildings. If the hill is the site of the city, it is a truncated cone like Cirta, or a terraced zikkurat. Ezra sees the vision of the descent of the new Jerusalem in a field of flowers (cf. 4 Esd. 9:26 f., 13:35 f.), but John follows either the older tradition of Enoch (En. xxiv., xxv.) who visited a high mountain which, as his cicerone Michael explained, was the throne of God “where the great and holy One, the Lord of glory, the King of eternity, will sit when he shall descend to visit the earth with goodness,” or more probably the primitive association of paradise with a mountain (cf. Oesterley’s Evol. of Mess. Idea, 129 f., Volz, 375).

Having the glory of God: and her light was like unto a stone most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal;
“With the dazzling splendour of God,” cf. on Revelation 21:3Ezekiel 43:5Isaiah 60:1-2Uxor splendet radiis maritiδόξα, here, as usually in a apocalyptic literature, denotes the manifestation and realisation of the divine presence. A realistic turn is given to the expression by the “shimmering radiance” of ὁ φωστήρ κ.τ.λ. (asyndeton); “her brilliance is like a very precious stone, a jasper, crystal-clear” (i.e., transparent and gleaming as rock-crystal). The modern jasper is an opaque tinted quartz, only partially translucent at the edges. Perhaps, in reproducing Isaiah 54:11-12 (καὶ θήσω τὰς ἐπάλξεις σου ἴασπιν καὶ τὰς πύλας σου λίθους κρυστάλλου), the writer regarded both clauses as complementary (Cheyne); hence is ὡς λκ. Otherwise ἴασπις might represent an opal, a diamond, or a topaz, any one of which answers better to the description of “transparent and valuable”. Flinders Petrie, however, suggests some variety of the dark green jasper.

And had a wall great and high, and had twelve gates, and at the gates twelve angels, and names written thereon, which are the names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel:
ἔχουσα. The constr. becomes still more irregular, the participles agreeing with an imaginary nominative, ἡ πόλις, sugg. by ὁ φωστήρ. The inscribed names denote the catholicity of the church and its continuity with the ancient people of God. A writer who could compose, or incorporate, or retain (as we choose to put it), passages like Revelation 5:9 and Revelation 14:4, is not to be suspected of particularism here. Even on the score of poetic congruity, the new Jerusalem implied such an archaic and traditional allusion to the twelve tribes. The angelic guardians of the gates are an Isaianic trait added to the Ezekiel picture.

On the east three gates; on the north three gates; on the south three gates; and on the west three gates.
And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.
ἔχων, another rough asyndeton.—θεμελίους κ.τ.λ., a symbolical and corporate expression for the historical origin of the church in the primitive circle of the disciples who adhered to Jesus (cf. on Revelation 22:19). It is not their names but their historical and apostolic position which is in the writer’s mind. The absence of Paul’s name is no more significant than the failure to emphasise that of Peter. For the objective and retrospective tone of the allusion, with its bearing on the question of the authorship, see Introd. § 8. Foundation-stones in an ancient building were invested with high, sacred significance. Here the twelve apostles correspond roughly to the twelve φύλαρχοι of the Mosaic period (Matthew 19:28, Clem. Rom. xlii.–xliii.).

And he that talked with me had a golden reed to measure the city, and the gates thereof, and the wall thereof.
The measures of the city are now taken, as in Ezekiel 40:3Ezekiel 40:48Ezekiel 42:16 f., to elucidate the vision (otherwise in Revelation 11:1-2). It turns out to be an enormous quadrilateral cube, like Ezekiel’s ideal sanctuary, a cube being symbolical of perfection to a Jew, as a circle is to ourselves. Whether 1500 miles represent the total circumference or the length of each side, the hyperbole is obvious, but John is following the patriotic rabbinic traditions which asserted that Jerusalem would extend as far as Damascus in the latter days (Zechariah 9:1) if not to the high throne of God. In Sib. Or. 5:250 f. the heaven-born Jews who inhabit Jerusalem are to run a wall as far as Joppa. Further measurements in Baba-Bathra f. 75, 2 (cf. Gfrôrer, ii. 245 f.; Bacher, Agada d. Tann. i. 194 f., 392). As in the case of the tabernacle in Jerusalem of the Hexateuch, so here: the symmetry and harmony of the divine life are naïvely represented by Oriental fantasy in terms of mathematics and architecture. A wall of about 72 yards high seems oddly unsymmetrical in view of the gigantic proportions of the city, though it might refer to the breadth (Simcox) or to the height of the city above the plain. But the whole description is built on multiples of twelve, a sacred number of completeness. The wall is a purely poetical detail, required to fill out the picture of the ancient city; like the similar touches in 24, 26, Revelation 22:2, it has no allegorical significance whatever. cf. Slav. En. lxv. 10: “and there shall be to them” (i.e., to the just in eternity) “a great wall which cannot be broken down”.—μέτρον κ.τ.λ., another naive reminder (cf. Revelation 19:9-10Revelation 22:8-9) that angels were not above men.

And the city lieth foursquare, and the length is as large as the breadth: and he measured the city with the reed, twelve thousand furlongs. The length and the breadth and the height of it are equal.
And he measured the wall thereof, an hundred and forty and four cubits, according to the measure of a man, that is, of the angel.
And the building of the wall of it was of jasper: and the city was pure gold, like unto clear glass.
The materials of the city. ἐνδώμησις, so an undated but pre-Christian inscription, τἐνδώμησιν τοῦ τεμένους (Dittenberger’s Sylloge inscriptGraec. 583), where the orthography is pronounced “nova” (see reff.).

While the city itself (or its streets, Revelation 21:21) is supposed to be constructed of transparent gold like the house of Zeus πολύχρυσον (Hippol. 69), the wall appearing above the monoliths or foundation-stones is made entirely of jasper, which again is the special ornament assigned to the first foundation-stone (Revelation 21:19, see on Revelation 21:11). The Babylonian zikkurats were picked out with coloured bricks; but the exterior of this second city is to be what only the interior of a Babylonian sanctuary had been—brilliant as the sun—flashing with precious stones and gold and silver. In Yasht Revelation 13:3 the heavenly Zoroastrian palace of the sky also “shines in its body of ruby.” The general sketch is suggested by Isaiah 54:11-12, and even more directly by Tob 13:16-17 (“For Jerusalem shall be builded with sapphire and emerald, thy walls with precious stones, the towers and battlements with pure gold; and the streets of Jerusalem shall be paved with beryl and carbuncle and stones of Ophir”). The Egyptian mansion of Life is also composed of jasper, with four walls, facing the south, the north, the east, and the west (cf. Records of Past, 6:113). The twelve gems correspond upon the whole to those set in gold (cf. Ezekiel 28:13) upon the high priest’s breastplate in 2 Peter (Exodus 28:17-20Exodus 39:10-13), which the writer loosely reproduces from memory. What the old covenant confined to the high priest is now a privilege extended to the whole people of God (cf. Revelation 21:22); for the astrological basis and the relation of the two O.T. and the present lists, cf. Flinders Petrie in Hastings’ D. B. 4:619–621; Myres in E. Bi. 4800 f.; St. Clair in Journ. Theol. Studies, 8:213 f.; and Jeremias, 68, 88 f. No occult or mystical significance attaches to these stones. The writer is simply trying to convey the impression of a radiant and superb structure.—σάπφειρος = lapis lazuli (sapphirus et aureis punctis collucet. Caeruleae et sapphiri, raroque cum purpura, Pliny, H. N. 37:39), a blue stone prized in Egypt and in Assyria, where it was often “used to overlay the highest parts of buildings” (E. Bi. 2710).—χαλκηδών = either a variety of dioptase or emerald gathered on a mountain in Chalcedon (Pliny), or more probably an agate (ḳarkedrâ Pesh. rendering of שׁבר = LXX ἀχάτης Exodus 28:19), i.e., a variegated stone, whose base is chalcedony. The modern chalcedony is merely a translucent (grey) quartz, with a milky tinge. χρυσόλιθος = a gem of some (sparkling?) golden hue (LXX = תּרשׁישׁ), perhaps some variety of our topaz or beryl, which ranges from emerald-green to pale blue and yellow. The modern chrysolite is merely a hard greenish mineral, of no particular value. χρυσόλιθος and χρυσόπρασος (a leek-coloured gem) are probably varieties of the ancient beryl, unless the latter is the green chalcedony, and the former the modern topaz. μαργαρῖται κ.τ.λ. (on their value in the ancient world, see Usener’s study in Theol. Abhand. 203–213): the conception is simplified from an old Jewish fancy of R. Jochanan preserved in Baba-Bathra, f. 75, 1, “Deus adducet gemmas et margaritas, triginta cubitos longas totidemque latas, easque excauabit in altitudinem xx cubitorum, et latitudinem x cubitorum, collocabitque in portis Hierosolymorum”. ἡ πλατεῖα, generic = “the streets” (like ξύλονRevelation 22:2), unless it has the sense of “forum” or “market-place” (as 2 Chronicles 32:6Job 29:7 LXX). But the singular may allude to the fact that “the typical Eastern city had … one street which led from the void place at the entering in of the gate to the court of the king’s palace” (Simcox). Philo (quis haer. § 44., leg. alleg. § 20.) had already made gold emblematic of the divine nature diffused through all the world, owing to the metal’s fusible qualities.

[923]P Codex Porphyrianus (sæc. ix.), at St. Petersburg, collated by Tischendorf. Its text is deficient for chap. Revelation 2:13-16.

And the foundations of the wall of the city were garnished with all manner of precious stones. The first foundation was jasper; the second, sapphire; the third, a chalcedony; the fourth, an emerald;
The fifth, sardonyx; the sixth, sardius; the seventh, chrysolite; the eighth, beryl; the ninth, a topaz; the tenth, a chrysoprasus; the eleventh, a jacinth; the twelfth, an amethyst.
And the twelve gates were twelve pearls; every several gate was of one pearl: and the street of the city was pure gold, as it were transparent glass.
And I saw no temple therein: for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it.
And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine in it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof.
Another fulfilment of the O.T. ideal (Isaiah 60:19-20). It is a Jewish-Christian symbol for Paul’s thought—God shall be all and in all. So in 4 Ezra 7 :[42] at the last judgment there is neither sun nor moon nor any natural light, “but only the splendour of the glory of the Most High”. “As the sun of righteousness Christ has been able to vanquish the sol inuictus of the Roman Cæsar-cultus” (Usener, Gôtternamen, p. 184). A cruder form of the idea occurs in the pseudo-Philonic Biblic. Antiquit. where “non erat necessarium lumen (for the night-march), ita exsplendebat genuinum lapidum lumen” (i.e., of the jewels on the Amorite idols), jewels which were replaced by twelve precious stones each engraved with the name of one of the twelve tribes.

And the nations of them which are saved shall walk in the light of it: and the kings of the earth do bring their glory and honour into it.
Further traits borrowed from Isaiah 60. (see reff.).

And the gates of it shall not be shut at all by day: for there shall be no night there.
νὺξ κ.τ.λ. “for no night (when even in peace they would be shut, Nehemiah 13:19) shall be there”.

And they shall bring the glory and honour of the nations into it.
From the tradition of En. liii. 1 and Ps. Sol. 17:34–35 (where the Gentile nations seek Jerusalem φέροντες δῶρα … καὶ ἰδεῖν τὴν δόξαν κυρίουἣν ἐδόξασεν αὐτὴν ὁ θεός); cf. Apoc. Bar. lxviii. 5. The idea of 24 and 26 is of course literally inconsistent with those of Revelation 19:17 f. and Revelation 20:12 f., since on the new earth there were no residents except the risen saints. Both ideas were current in rabbinic eschatology (Gfrörer, ii. 238 f.), but the Apocalypse is entirely free from any such complacent estimate of Gentile outsiders (cf. En. xc. 30). The discrepancy here, as in Revelation 22:5, is imaginary. These details are simply poetical and imaginative, inserted from the older symbolism, in which they were quite appropriate, in order by their archaic and pictorial fulness to fill out the sketch of the future city. They have no allegorical significance.

And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh a lie: but they which are written in the Lamb's book of life.
R. Jochanan (Baba-Bathra f. 76, 2,) said the coming Jerusalem would not be like the present one: in hanc ingreditur quicunque uult, in illam uero non nisi qui ad eam ordinati sunt. Citizenship similarly in John’s new city is a matter of moral character and of divine election, not of nationality. The Lord’s city is like the Lord’s table, as the Ep. to Diognetus finely puts it (5) κοινή ἀλλʼ οὐ κοινήcommunis but not profanus, “common and open to all, yet in another sense no common thing.” The trait is adapted from Slav. En. ix., where the garden-paradise of the third heaven is only for those loyal to their faith, humble, just, charitable and benevolent, blameless and whole hearted, while the hell of torture (Revelation 10:4-6) is reserved for all addicted to sodomy, witchcraft, theft, lying, murder, and fornication, besides oppression and callousness to human suffering. But βδ. and ψ. may be simply “idolatry” (as in LXX); the keynote of the book being struck once more (as in En. xcix. 9). In the Egyptian litany of the nine gods (E. B. D. 35) every petition ends with the words, “I have not spoken lies wittingly, nor have I done aught with deceit,” and in Apoc. Bar. xxxix. 6 the seer accuses the Roman Empire thus: “by it the truth will be hidden, and all those who are polluted with iniquity will flee to it, as evil beasts flee and creep into the forest”.

The Expositor's Greek Testament - Nicoll

Text Courtesy of BibleSupport.com. Used by Permission.

Bible Hub




According to app.logos.com in the information sidebar: 
ExpGT 5About The Expositor’s Greek Testament, Volume V (1 Peter–Revelation): Commentary

The 5-volume Expositor’s Greek Testament ranks among the most important commentaries on the Greek text of the New Testament from the 19th century, drawing from the scholarship of twenty contributors under the editorship of William Robertson Nicoll. In addition to the Greek text, this massive reference work contains textual, literary, and grammatical commentary on nearly every Greek word in the entire New Testament.The Expositor’s Greek Testament also includes lengthy introductions to each of the books in the New Testament, surveying the literary and interpretive history, along with an introduction to the historical context of each book and an extensive bibliography.

exgrktst05com

LLS:EXGRKTST05COM

2020-03-12T23:11:24Z

Series: The Expositor’s Greek Testament Commentary

https://app.logos.com/books/LLS%3AEXGRKTST05COM/references/bible.87.21.1-87.21.2




No comments:

Explanation of BDAG and Free Logos Training Videos

 

 


Watch "Passion - How Great Is Our God (World Edition) [feat. Chris Tomlin]" on YouTube



43,936,101 views
Apr 12, 2013


I'm just a nobody
720,280 views • Sep 3, 2020







Make-A-Fort Snapwize Inc.
Christianbook - Everything Christian for Less
If you are wondering where the pages that contained the words "excerpt", "Introducing" or other words indicating I was quoting a book have all gone, I migrated all of them over to Posts and Posted them all on August 18 and August 19 2024. I did that so you could use the search widget that is built in to the blog on the upper right hand corner. You will be happy to know that there are more of them than just the batch that were migrated, there were also lots of posts that contained the same words that did not have to be migrated over, they were there all along. I am really enjoying doing introductions and excerpts because it really makes for powerful and fascinating reading when I do them. You get the feeling you are in a bookstore holding a book in your hand looking at the table of contents and deciding whether or not to buy the book.


The following website is called Indie Reader and the founder is Amy Edelman . it is an Arts & Humanities Website (the company is called Edelman Books/Media)
_
10% Offer on gourmet sweets for New Year | Use WELCOME24

About Me

My photo
Jesus Christ is alive and living in the hearts and lives of billions of Christians. I am interested in what He is saying and doing in the lives of those who know and love Him and interested in being a familiar and trusted blogger about Him

Dallas Theological Seminary Fighting Human Trafficking video on youtube

Bibles.com

Human Trafficking Victims Program Introduction


She said two urls that are no longer the urls to use.
The first one, www.dhs.gov/humantrafficking automatically becomes www.dhs.gov/blue-campaign
The facebook site was the old site which does not automatically update to the following, the new facebook site is http://facebook.com/dhsbluecampaign
Click this link to search all of the DHS site for mentions of the Blue Campaign


The Ultimate Summary of C.S. Lewis

Kevin Livermore embedded Podcast Till We Have Faces. CS Lewis’ favorite book that he wrote

Intro image for Special Ops Feed widget

U.S. Army Special Operations Command RSS Feed

95.9 The Fish - Concerts RSS

Justice News

National Terrorism Advisory System Widget



Sky Spills Over


2,380,500 views May 27, 2015 This song is on the album "Sovereign" From Michael W. Smith
Sky Spills Over · Michael W. Smith
Sovereign
℗ 2014 The MWS Group, under exclusive license to Sparrow Records
Released on: 2014-01-01
Producer: Christopher Stevens
Composer Lyricist: Michael W. Smith
Composer Lyricist: Christopher Stevens
Composer Lyricist: Ryan Smith

MICHAEL W SMITH Twitter Widget
List of blog posts on this blog that are Twitter Widgets

Greg Laurie Harvest Podcast List Scrolling Widget



Greg Laurie Podcast





Greg Laurie Twitter Widget

LLC or Corp? Incorporate online at incorporate.com

Chemical Guys News Release

Training for Azure

The list of training opportunities below are similar to the example youtube videos above

Edureka Text Ads




Cyber Monday-Flat 30% OFF On All Live Courses -Coupon Code - CYB30
Weekend Offer - Flat 30% OFF On Live Courses, Coupon Code - EDUREKA30
Black Friday OFFER - Flat 20% OFF On Masters Courses - Coupon Code - BLACK20
Thanks Giving Day Offer -Flat 30% OFF On All Live Courses, coupon Code - THANKS30
Weekend Offer - Flat 30% OFF On Live Courses, Coupon Code - EDUREKA30
Flat 20% OFF On All Live Courses - Coupon Code - EDUREKA20
Flat 10% OFF on Any Masters Course - Coupon Code- MASTERS10
Be a Certified Big Data Expert Master Big Data, Hadoop, Spark, Cassandra, Talend and Kafka and become an unchallenged big data expert. Know more!
Be a Certified Cloud Architect Master Cloud Computing, AWS, DevOps and become an unchallenged cloud expert. Know more!
Be a Certified DevOps Engineer Master DevOps, Python, Docker, Splunk, AWS and Linux and become an unchallenged DevOps expert. Know more!
Be a Certified Data Scientist Master Data Science, Python, Spark, Tensorflow and Tableau and become an unchallenged data science expert. Know more!
MySQL DBA Live Online Training by Edureka
MySQL DBA Online Training by Edureka Gain expertise in MySQL Workbench, MySQL Server, Data Modeling, MySQL Connector, Database Design, MySQL Command line, MySQL Functions etc.
Flat 20% OFF
Flat 15% OFF
Flat 10% OFF
Become an Expert in Big Data and Analytics . View all courses!
Big Data and Analytics Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in Cloud Computing . View all courses!
Cloud Computing Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in Business Intelligence & Visualization . View all courses!
Business Intelligence & Visualization Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in DevOps. View all courses!
DevOps Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in Programming and Web Development.View all courses!
Become an Expert in Software Testing.View all courses!
Software Testing Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in Project Management.View all courses!
Become an Expert in Mobile App Development.View all courses!
Mobile App Development Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in Finance & Marketing.View all courses!
Finance & Marketing Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in Power BI.View upcoming batches!
Power BI Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in Docker.View upcoming batches!
Docker Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in AI and Deep Learning with TensorFlow.View upcoming batches!
AI & Deep Learning with TensorFlow Live Online Training
Become an Expert in Microsoft Azure.View upcoming batches!
Microsoft Azure Live Online Training
Become an Expert in ReactJS with Redux.View upcoming batches!
ReactJS with Redux Live Online Training
Become an Expert in Blockchain.View upcoming batches!
Blockchain Live Online Training
DevOps Live Online Training by Edureka
Top PMP exam preparation online course Crack PMP exam and get the pre-requisite 35 contact hours of project management education.
Linux Live Online Training Learn Installation, User Admin, Initialization, Server Config, Shell Scrip, Kerberos, Database Config. Know More
Node.js Online Training ExpressJS,EJS,Jade,Handlebars, Template,Gulp. Work on 5 Real-life Projects using Node JS
Web Developer Live Online Training by Edureka
Web Developer Online Training Learn HTML5, CSS3, JavaScript, jQuery,Twitter Bootstrap, Social Media Plugins. Know More!
Node.js Live Online Training by Edureka
Linux Admin Live Online Training by Edureka
Become an Expert in using Spring Framework. View Upcoming Batches!
Spring Live Online Training by Edureka
Talend Online Training Learn Talend Architecture, TOS, Hive in Talend, Pig in Talend. Work on Real-life Project, Get Certified.
Talend Live Online Training by Edureka
AWS Architect Live Online Training by Edureka
Informatica Live Online Training by Edureka
Java Live Online Training by Edureka
Python Live Online Training by Edureka
Openstack Live Online Training by Edureka
AngularJS Live Online Training by Edureka
Teradata Live Online Training by Edureka
Selenium Live Online Training by Edureka
Android Live Online Training by Edureka
Kafka Live Online Training by Edureka
Splunk Live Online Training by Edureka
Data Analytics Live Online Training by Edureka
Hadoop Admin Live Online Training by Edureka
Spark Live Online Training by Edureka
Big Data and Hadoop Live Online Training by Edureka
Data Science Live Online Training by Edureka
PMP Live Online Training by Edureka
Top online course certified by Project Management Institute (PMI) Get in-depth knowledge and understanding in various Agile Tool & Techniques.
Data Science Training by Edureka Drive Business Insights from Massive Data Sets Utilizing the Power of R Programming, Hadoop, and Machine Learning.
Big Data and Hadoop - Training by Edureka Become a Hadoop Expert by mastering MapReduce, Yarn, Pig, Hive, HBase, Oozie, Flume and Sqoop while working on industry based Use-cases and Projects. Know More!
Apache Spark and Scala - Training by Edureka Learn large-scale data processing by mastering the concepts of Scala, RDD, Spark Streaming, Spark SQL, MLlib and GraphX. Know More!
Hadoop Administration - Training by Edureka Become Hadoop Administrator by Planning, Deployment, Management, Monitoring & Tuning in Hadoop Cluster. Know More!
Analytics Training with R Master Regression, Data Mining, Predictive Analytics. Know More!
Splunk Certification Training Become an expert in searching, monitoring, analyzing and visualizing machine data in Splunk. Learn Splunk and get certified.
Financial Modeling with Advanced Valuation Techniques - Training by Edureka Become an expert in financial modeling by live online training conducted by industry experts. Know More!
Apache Kafka- Training by Edureka Become an expert in high throughput publish-subscribe distributed messaging system by mastering Kafka Cluster, Producers and Consumers, Kafka API, Kafka Integration with Hadoop, Storm and Spark. Know More!
Edureka - Live Online Training
Android Development- Training by Edureka Create Android apps, integrate them with Social Media, Google drive, Google maps, SQLite, etc. while working on Android Studio. Know More!
Testing With Selenium WebDriver- Training by Edureka Master the software automation testing framework for web applications using TDD, TestNG, Sikuli, JaCoCo. Know More!
Teradata Training by Edureka Become an expert in developing Data Warehousing applications using Teradata while working on real time use cases and projects. Get trained for TEO-141 and TEO-142 certifications. Know More!
AngularJS Training by Edureka Boost your web application development skills and become an invaluable SPA (single page application) developer. Know More!
SAS Certification Training by Edureka Become a Base SAS Expert by mastering the various concepts of SAS Language while working on real-life use cases and projects. Know More!
Openstack Training by Edureka Become an OpenStack expert by mastering concepts like Nova, Glance, Keystone, Neutron, Cinder, Trove, Heat, Celiometer and other OpenStack services. Know More!
Python Training by Edureka Learn Python the Big data way with integration of Machine learning, Hadoop, Pig, Hive and Web Scraping. Know More!
Java/J2EE and SOA - Training by Edureka Get a head start into Advance Java programming and get trained for both core and advanced Java concepts along with various Java frameworks like Hibernate & Spring. Know More!
Informatica PowerCenter 9.X Developer & Admin - Training by Edureka Master ETL and data mining using Informatica PowerCenter Designer. Know More!
DevOps Training by Edureka Gain expertise in various Devops processes and tools like Puppet, Jenkins, Nagios, GIT for automating multiple steps in SDLC, Ansible, SaltStack, Chef. Know More!
AWS Architect Certification Training by Edureka Master the skills to design cloud-based applications with Amazon Web Services. Know More!
Power BI Certification Training by Edureka Master the concepts about Power BI Desktop, Power BI Embedded, Power BI Map, Power BI DAX, Power BI SSRS. Know More!
Docker Certification Training by Edureka Master the Docker Hub, Docker Compose, Docker Swarm, Dockerfile, Docker Containers, Docker Engine, Docker Images. Know More!
Microsoft Azure Certification Training by Edureka Master the concepts like Azure Ad, Azure Storage, Azure SDK, Azure Cloud Services, Azure SQL Database, Azure Web App. Know More!
Tensorflow Certification Training by Edureka Master the concepts such as SoftMax function, Autoencoder Neural Networks, Restricted Boltzmann Machine (RBM). Know More!
Data Warehousing Live Online Training by Edureka
Data Warehousing & BI Live Online Training by Edureka

The Discontinued New Rick Livermore Site Rss Feed

powered by Surfing Waves

Books A Million Newsletter

Redeem your offer now before it expires
 ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌


Wow. You must be kidding me! This is a way for the blog to really begin to pay commissions!


This email to the blog is dated 6/16/2024 but I did not read the email until today 7/30/2024

Sun, Jun 16, 12:12 PM

Consumer Cellular
Dear Richard,
Welcome to the Consumer Cellular Affiliate Program! We are excited to have you become a part of our very successful program.
CONTENT
Please reach out with any questions. 
Thanks,

The Affiliate Management Team
As a result of the above acceptance letter I have generated the following ads and information links:

Consumer Cellular

Switch Today and Save

When Freedom Calls, We're Here to AnswerWhen Freedom Calls, We're Here to Answer 

The following is the Consumer Cellular individual program:
Coupon code: None needed



Call Us         Online Chat 6am - 5pm PT

Christian Music Videos

NT Resources

Apologetics315

The Briefing - AlbertMohler.com

Daily Radio Program with Charles Stanley - In Touch Ministries

Boundaries Books

The Washington Times stories: Security

Judson Cornwall YouTube Video

YouTube Bible Gateway Basics Tutorial

Christian Bible Studies

The Rss Feed of Pastor Rick Warren

The Rss Feed of Pastor Rick Warren

Pastor Rick's Daily Hope

In Touch TV Broadcast featuring Dr. Charles Stanley - In Touch Ministries

Spurgeon’s Morning and Evening

Answers with Ken Ham

Children Missing From CA

Renewing Your Mind with R.C. Sproul

Jim Daly

Bible.org Blogs

Crosswalk.com

Staff Picks

ICE Headline News Feed by Category - Human Smuggling/Trafficking

Something Good with Dr. Ron Jones

Justice News

Verse of the Day

Contact Form to contribute or pay the blog a commission

Name

Email *

Message *

Contact Form Introduction

Notice to authors:
I would like to add like minded authors to my blogger.com site. If you would like to be added email me a sample of what your writing is like to the "contact us" form here on this site. I will invite you as long as your example is suitable. Take a look at what type of a blog it is here

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Matthew West You Tube Video "Unplanned"

Ad Group Footer 1a

 

Michelangelo 







Web Page just for Bibles




Gear - Hat




Shop now for our selection of Christian Strong Apparel




Alibris: Books, Music, & Movies

A resume that gets you a new job is here


Bibles.com



Verse of the day Bible Gateway Widget










Contributions Welcome

The following request applies to any of the christian ministries that are currently getting visitors from my blog:

I am currently blogging: https://webmaster220.blogspot.com
I would like to place a banner on the right side of my home page that promotes your ministry
If I do that and it helps your ministry grow and expand do you have a suggestion as to what type of commission or contribution could be paid to my ministry. The reason I am saying that is there are a lot of ministries out there that are buying advertising space online and yours could be one of them for all I know. I have been an affiliate marketer for years on my blog but no commissions have ever been earned even though I am doing everything required to be done to earn the commissions. My blog readers are just not interested in spending any money on any of the goods or services discussed in my banner ads and text links. To reply, use the contact form below this paragraph Thanks, Rick Livermore - Webmaster220

Christianbook - Everything Christian for Less

Ad Group Footer 1b

123AutoParts.com _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ keeperMemories Certified Enterprise Blockchain Professional

Search Widget: Bible Lookup for websites widget

Book Abbreviations for Bible Widget This is the list of three letter abbreviation for each book of the Bible to use for Passage References at https://bibles.org/widget







Sam's Club





logo

popular video

This video is one of many produced by Kevin Livermore. Check out his Web page on this blog featuring 15 videos stacked in order of popularity.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Total Pageviews

clustrmaps.com