[pg 005]PREFACE.The Apocalypse should be regarded as a peculiarly interesting portion of scripture: a blessing being promised those who read, hear, and keep the things which are written therein. It has been subjected to so many contradictory interpretations, that any attempt to comprehend its meaning is often regarded with distrust; and the impression has become very prevalent, that it is a“sealed book,”—that its meaning is so hidden in unintelligible symbols, that very little can be known respecting it; and that to attempt to unfold its meaning, is to tread presumptuously on forbidden ground.The attention of the Christian community has been called more of late to its study, by the publication of several elaborate Expositions. One in two large volumes, 8vo., by Prof. Stuart, was published at Andover, Mass., in 1845. A large 8vo. volume, by David N. Lord, was issued from the press of the Harpers, in New York, in 1847; and a smaller work, by Rev. Thomas Wickes, appeared in that city in 1851. These are the more important works on the subject which have been published in this country. In England, the“Horæ Apocalypticæ,”by the Rev. E. B. Elliott, A.M., late Vicar of Tuxford, and fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, has passed through several editions,—the fourth of which, in four large vols. 8vo., was published in London,[pg 006]in 1851. These works, with the writings of Habershon, Cunningham, Croly, Bickersteth, Birks, Brooks, Keith, and other distinguished English writers, have caused the study of the Apocalypse to be regarded with more favor of late than heretofore.The Expositions ofMr. Lordhave thrown much light on the nature and laws of symbols, by unfolding the principles in accordance with which they are used. The evolving of these has removed from many passages the obscurity which had before caused them to be regarded as enigmatical. There are, doubtless, many portions of the Apocalypse, the meaning of which is as yet only dimly perceived, and which will be more clearly unfolded by the transpiring of future events; and it would be arrogant to claim that its interpretation had been freed from all perplexities. But it is believed that it may be as profitably and as satisfactorily studied as other portions of Scripture; and that the reader may feel an assurance of approximating to a knowledge of the true meaning of its symbolic teachings.The Bible is its own interpreter; and when practicable, scripture should be explained by scripture. The meaning imputed to any passage must never contradict, but must harmonize with that of parallel texts. In illustrating the several references in the Apocalypse to the same events and epochs, a repetition of scripture is somewhat unavoidable.These pages have resulted from notes prepared in a familiar course of Bible-class instruction, where the study of brevity was necessary. Without designing to speak dogmatically, the didactic was found the more direct and simple mode of expression. In presenting this exposition, merely as the opinion of the writer, it is with the hope that it will give, in a small compass, a common-sense view of the intricacies of this book, and be acceptable to those interested in the study of prophecy.[pg 007]ELEMENTS OF PROPHETIC INTERPRETATION.1.The Grammarof any science is a development of the principles by which it is governed. As the science of interpretation must be founded on some fixed and uniform laws, the unfolding of these is the first step in the study of prophecy.2.Biblical ExegesisandSacred Hermeneutics, are terms applied to the science of interpretation, or of learning the meaning of Biblical words and phrases.3.The Usus Loquendi, is the usual mode of speaking. When applied to the Scriptures, it denotes the generalscriptural useof words.4. To learn the meaning of scriptural terms, their general use must be ascertained, by comparing their contexts in the several places of their occurrence.5.Prophecyis the prediction of a future event. The term sometimes denotes a book of prophecies (Rev. 22:18); and sometimes a history.—2 Chron. 9:29.6.ConsecutiveProphecy gives the succession of future events in the order in which they will transpire.Examples.—See Dan. 2d, 7th, 8th, 11th, and Rev. 6th and 7th, 9th to the 11th; 12th and 15th, &c.7.DiscursiveProphecy presents future events, irrespective of the order of their occurrence.Examples.—Isaiahand the minor prophets.8.ConditionalProphecy is when the fulfilment is dependent on the compliance of those to whom the promise is made, with the conditions on which it is given.Examples.—“Ifye walk in my statutes and keep my commandments, and do them: then I will give you rain in due season, and the land shall yield her increase, and the trees of the field shall yield their fruit.”Lev. 26:3, 4.“Butifye willnothearken unto me, and willnotdo all these commandments; andifye shall despise my statutes, or if your soul abhor my judgments, so that ye will not do all my commandments,butthat ye break my covenant: I also will do this unto you, I will even appoint over you terror, consumption, and the burning ague, that shall consume the[pg 008]eyes, and cause sorrow of heart: and ye shall sow your seed in vain; for your enemies shall eat it.”Ib.14-16.“And it shall come to pass,ifthou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe and to do all his commandments which I command thee this day: that the Lord thy God will set thee on high above all nations of the earth: and all these blessings shall come on thee, and overtake thee,ifthou shalt hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God.”Deut. 28:1, 2.“But it shall come to pass,ifthou wilt not hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe to do all his commandments and his statutes which I command thee this day: that all these curses shall come upon thee, and overtake thee,”&c.Ib.15.Predictions of mere national prosperity, or adversity, are usually conditional. When the condition is not expressed, it is implied.Example.—The Lord said unto Jonah,“Arise, go unto Nineveh, that great city, and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee.... And Jonah began to enter into the city a day's journey, and he cried, and said, Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown. So the people of Nineveh believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them even to the least of them.... And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of the evil that he had said that he would do unto them: and he did it not.”For all cases of this kind, the Lord has given the following generalRule:“At what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to pluck up, and to pull down, and to destroy it: if that nation against whom I have pronounced turn from their evil, I will repent of the evil that I thought to do unto them. And at what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to build and to plant it; if it do evil in my sight, that it obey not my voice, then I will repent of the good wherewith I said I would benefit them.”Jer. 18:7-10.9.UnconditionalProphecy includes all predictions which are absolute in their nature.Examples.—“But as truly as I live, all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord.”Num. 14:21.[pg 009]“For behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising.... For the nation and kingdom that will not serve thee shall perish; yea, those nations shall be utterly wasted.... Thy people also shall be all righteous: they shall inherit the land for ever, the branch of my planting, the work of my hands, that I may be glorified.”Isa. 60:2, 3, 12, 21.“But in the last days it shall come to pass, that the mountain of the house of the Lord shall be established in the top of the mountains, and it shall be exalted above the hills; and people shall flow unto it.”Micah 4:1.10. AVisionis a revelation fromGod, supernaturally presented. Future events are made to pass before the mind of theseer, as if actually transpiring.Examples.—See the prophecies ofIsaiah,Amos,Obadiah, &c.11. ASymbolic Visionis where the future events, instead of being presented to the mind of the prophet, are represented by analogous objects.Examples.—The prophecies ofEzekiel,Daniel,Zechariah, andJohn, are of this kind.12. ALiteralProphecy is where the prediction is given in words used according to their primary and natural import.Examples.—Num. 14:21-35; Jer. 25:1-33.13. Prophecy isfigurativewhen it abounds in tropes, as in much ofIsaiahand the minor prophets; and it is symbolic, when symbols instead of the objects themselves are presented—as inDanielandJohn.14.Poetryis writing thus constituted by the metrical or rhythmical structure of its sentences; and is not necessarily any more figurative or obscure than prose writing. It is, also, a term sometimes applied to the language of excited imagination and feeling.The Poetry of the Bible consists in Hebrew parallelisms, where the idea of the preceding line is repeated, or contrasted, in the succeeding one.Examples.—The Psalms,Isaiah, and other prophets.15.Highly Figurative, orSymbolicProphecies—the[pg 010]laws and use ofTropesandSymbolsbeing understood are not necessarily more equivocal, enigmatical or obscure, than those which are literal.16.Literal Fulfilmentof prophecy is prophecy fulfilled in accordance with thegrammatical interpretationof its language.17.Literal Interpretation, whentechnicallyapplied to the interpretation of prophecy, is not opposed to tropes or figures of speech, but tospiritualinterpretation. It interprets the language of the Scriptures, as similar language would be interpretedin all other writings.18.Spiritual Interpretation(mystical) seeks, in the language of Scripture, a meaning that is not expressed by any of the ordinary rules of language. It sets at defiance all the laws of language, and makes fancy the interpreter of prophecy.“It subjects clear predictions to an exegetical alembic that effectually subtilizes and evaporates their meaning.”—Bush.19.Ultra Literal Interpretationis a disregard of the peculiarities of symbols and of the several kinds of tropes—understanding them as if they wereliterallyexpressed.20.SymbolsandTropesareliterallyexplained, when interpreted in accordance with thegrammatical lawswhich respectively govern their use.21.Prophetic Symbolsare objects, real or imaginary,representativeof agents or objects possessing analogous characteristics. All agents or objectsseenin symbolic visions are symbols. The inspiredexplanationsof symbols are always literal, except when they are affirmed to be the same as some other symbol which represents the same object, as in Rev. 17:9.22.Laws of Symbols.I.“The Symbol and that which it represents resemble each other in the station they fill, the relation they sustain, and the agencies they exert in their respective spheres.”—Lord.II. The Symbol and that which it represents are of thesame, or they are ofdifferentspecies, kinds, or rank, according to thenatureanduseof the symbol.III.“When the Symbol is of such nature, or is used in such a relation that it can properly symbolise something[pg 011]differentfrom itself, the representative and that which it represents, while the counterpart of each other, are ofdifferentspecies, kinds, or rank.”—Lord.Example.—Dan. 7:3, beasts; v. 17, governments.IV.“Symbols that are of such a nature, station or relation, that there is nothing of an analogous kind that they can represent, symbolize agents, objects, acts, or events oftheir ownkind.”—Ib.Example.—Dan. 7:9.V.“When the Symbol and that which it symbolizes differ from each other, the correspondence between the representative and that which it represents, still extends to their chief parts; and the elements or parts of the symbols denote corresponding parts in that which is symbolized.”—Ib.VI.“The Names of Symbols are their literal and proper names, not metaphorical titles.”—Ib.VII.“A single agent, in many instances, symbolizes a body and succession of agents.”—Ib.VIII. Symbols of the same kind, and used in the same relations, always represent one class of objects; and when the office of a symbol has been once shown, the same symbol, similarly used, always fills a like office. They are never used arbitrarily.IX. While like symbols represent like objects, the same agents are often indicated by different symbols.Thus, a church may be symbolized by a city and a woman; and government, by a beast and a mountain, &c.23.Inspired Explanations of Symbolic Representations:—Ancient of Days—The Most High.—Dan. 7:9, 22.Candlesticks—Churches.—Rev. 1:20.Carpenters—Destroyers of governments.—Zech. 1:21.Days—Years.—Num. 14:34. Ezek. 4:4-6.Horns, of a wild beast—Kings or kingdoms succeeding to a divided empire.—Dan. 8:22 and 7:24.Heads, of a wild beast—Kings or forms of government.—Rev. 17:9, 10.Image, of different metals—A succession of governments.—Dan. 2:37-42.Incense, or odors—Prayers.—Rev. 5:8 and 8:4.Lamb, the—Christ.—Rev. 5:6, 9, 10.Lamb's wife—Risen saints.—Rev. 19:7, 8.Lake of fire and brimstone—The place of the second death.—Rev. 20:15.Likeness of a man—The Lord.—Ezek. 1:26, 28, and 8:2, 4.Linen, fine and clean—Righteousness of saints—Rev. 19:8.Mountains—Kings, or forms of government.—Rev. 17:9, 10.New Jerusalem—The redeemed Church, or the Bride, the Lamb's wife.—Rev. 21:9, 10.Revivification of dry bones—Resurrection of the dead.—Ezek. 37:11, 12.Stars—Angels,i.e., messengers of the churches.—Rev. 1:20.Souls of martyrs living again—The first resurrection.—Rev. 20:4, 5.Stone, becoming a mountain—Kingdom of God.—Dan. 2:45.Waters—Peoples.—Rev. 17:15.Wild Beasts—Governments.—Dan. 7:17.Woman—A city.—Rev. 17:18. Explained to be a church.—21:9, 10.24.Tropesare figures of various kinds, used toillustratethe subjects to which they are applied.—They embrace the Simile, Metaphor, Prosopopœia, Apostrophe, Synecdoche, Allegory, &c.25.Laws of Figures—(a.)“The terms in which they are expressed are used in their ordinary and literal sense.”—Lord.(b.)“The agents or objects to which figures are applied are always expressly mentioned. Figures, in that respect, differ wholly from symbols, which never formally indicate, unless an interpretation is given, who the agents, or what the objects are which they represent.”—Ib.(c.)“The figurative terms are always predicates, or are employed in affirming something of some other agent or object; and are therefore either nouns, verbs, adjectives or adverbs.”—Ib.(d.)“As their terms are used literally, the figure lies, when they are employed in an unusual manner, simply in[pg 013]their being applied to objects to which they do not properly belong.”—Ib.(e.)“They are used accordingly in all such cases for the purpose of illustration, and their explication is accomplished, not by assigning to them some new and extraordinary meaning, but simply by conjoining with them the terms of a comparison which expresses the relation in which they are employed.”—Ib.(f.)“It is in metaphors and personification only that acts and qualities are ascribed to agents and objects that are incompatible with their nature; or do not properly belong to them.”—Ib. Theo. & Lit. Jour., vol. 1, p. 354.26. ASimile, or comparison, is an affirmation that one agent, object, or act, islike, or as, another,—there being a real or imaginary resemblance. Sometimes only the mere fact of a resemblance is affirmed. At others, the nature of the resemblance is indicated.Examples.—“As for man, his days areasgrass.”Psa. 103:15.“Whose garment waswhiteassnow.”Dan. 7:9.27.Antithesisis a contrast, or placing in opposite lights things dissimilar.Example.—“The wicked are overthrown and are not; but the house of the righteous shall stand.”Prov. 12:7.28. AMetaphoris a simile comprised in a word, without thesignof comparison. It is an affirmation of an object, incompatible with its nature—i.e., it affirms that an object is, what literally it is onlylike; or attributes to it acts, to which its acts only bear aresemblance.Examples.—“He is theRock.”Deut. 32:4.“Her gates shalllamentandmourn.”Isa. 3:25.A metaphor may be a simple affirmation of what an object is, or it may embrace“the agent, the act, the object, and the effect of an action.”—Lord.(a.) When an object is affirmed to be what it only resembles, that of which the affirmation is made is alwaysliterallyexpressed.(b.)“When a nature is ascribed to an object that does not belong to it, the acts or results affirmed to it are proper to thatimputed nature, not to its own.”—Lord.[pg 014](c.)“The meaning of a metaphorical passage is precisely what it would be if a comparison only were affirmed.”—Ib.29.An Elliptical Metaphoris where the figure is incomplete. An object, instead of being affirmed to be what it only resembles, is introduced by the name proper only to that resemblance. The literal name of the object and the affirmation to complete the figure are to be supplied.To find the meaning of an elliptical metaphor, trace the word through the Bible, and find to what object such metaphorical term is applied.Example.—“And in that day there shall be aRootofJesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people.”Isa. 11:10.Explanation.—“I [Jesus] am theRootand the offspring ofDavid.”Rev. 22:16.30.Prosopœia, orPersonification, is an address to an inanimate object, as if it were a person, and had intelligence.—Lord.Example.—“Give ear, O ye heavens, and I will speak; and hear, O earth, the words of my mouth.”Deut. 32:1.31.An Apostropheis adigressionfrom the order of any discourse, and a directaddressto the persons of whom it treats, or to those who are to form a judgment respecting the subject of which it treats.—Lord.Example.—“Hear the word of theLord, ye rulers of Sodom: give ear unto the law of ourGod, ye people of Gomorrah.”Isa. 1:10.32.An Allegoryis a narrative in which the subject of the discourse is described by an analogous subject, resembling it in its characteristics and circumstances—the subject of which it is descriptive being indicated in its connection.Examples.—See Ezek. 31:3-9; Ps. 80:8-16; Jud. 9:8-15.Pasthistoricalevents, instead of supposititious ones, are sometimes used for illustration. When thus used they serve as allegories, without affecting their original historical significance.Example.—Gal. 4: 22-31. See also Rom. 9:7, 8; 1 Cor. 9:9, 10, and 10:11.33.A Parableis a similitude taken from natural things, to instruct us in the knowledge of spiritual.Examples.—Matt. 13th, and 21:28-41.The Parable differs from the Allegory in that the acts ascribed are appropriate to the agents to which they are attributed.[pg 015]In the Allegory, acts may be ascribed to real objects which are not natural to those objects.Example.—See Judges 9:7-15.The Parable is sometimes used to denote a prophecy, (Num. 23:7); sometimes a discourse, (Job 27:1); sometimes a lamentation, (Micah 2:4); sometimes a proverb, or wise saying, (Prov. 26:7); and sometimes to indicate that a thing is apocryphal. Ezek. 20:49. The terms parable and allegory, are often wrongfully applied.34.A Riddleis an enigma—something to be guessed.Example.—See Judges 14:24-18. It is sometimes used to denote an allegory. Ezek. 17:1-10.35.Typesare emblems—greater events in the future being prefigured by typical observances,“which are a shadow of good things to come.”Col. 2:17.36.The Hypocatastasis, or substitution, is a figure introduced by Mr.Lord, in which the objects, or agents, of one class are, without any formal notice, employed in the place of the persons or things of which the passages in which they occur treat; and they are exhibited either as exerting, or as subjected to an agency proper to their nature, in order to represent by analogy, the agency which those persons are to exert, or of which those things are to be the subjects.Example.—“O, my people, they which lead thee cause thee to err, and destroy the way of thy paths.”—Isa. 3:12,—expressive of the manner in which they were misled by their rulers and kept from the truth.37.A Metonymyis a reversion, or the use of a noun to express that with which it is intimately connected, instead of using the term which would literally express the idea. Thus the cause is used for the effect, the effect for the cause, the thing containing for that which is contained in it, &c.Example.—“Ye have eaten up thevineyard.”Isa. 3:14—meaning the fruit of the vineyard.38.A Synecdocheis the use of a word expressive of a part, to signify the whole; or that expressive of the whole, to denote only a part—as the genus for the species, or the species for the genus, &c.Example.—“Mandieth and wasteth away; yeamangiveth up the ghost, and where is he?”Job 14:10.39.A Hyperboleis an exaggeration in which more is[pg 016]expressed than is intended to be understood.Example.—“I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written.”John 21:25—meaning that a great number might be written.40.Ironyis the utterance of pointed remarks, contrary to the actual thoughts of the speaker or writer—not to deceive, but to add force to the remark.Examples.—“No doubt but ye are the people, and wisdom shall die with you.”Job 12:2.“And it came to pass at noon, that Elijah mocked them, and said, Cry aloud: for heisa god: either he is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradventure he sleepeth and must be awaked.”1 Kings 18:27.41.The Interrogation—while its legitimate use is to ask a question—is also used to affirm or deny with great emphasis. Affirmative interrogations usually havenoornotin connection with the verb.Example.—“IsnotGod in the height of the heavens?”Job 22:12.Examples of a negative.—“Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? or shall a nation be born at once?”Isa. 66:8.“Can the rush grow up without mire?”Job 8:11.42.Exclamationsare digressions from the order of a discourse or writing, to give expression to the emotions of the speaker, or writer.Example.—“O that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away and be at rest!”Psa. 55:6.43.Fablesare fictions—additions to the word ofGod. All false theories and doctrines supposed to be based on the Bible, all interpretations of Scripture which do violence to the laws of language and falsify their meaning, and all opinions which are the result of mere traditions and doctrines of men, are to be classed as fables. Mark 7:8-13; 1 Pet. 1:18; 1 Tim. 1:4; 4:7; Tit. 1:14.44.Synchronous Scripturesare the several passages which have reference to any one and the same event.Each portion of Scripture respecting any subject, must be considered in connection with all the Scriptures that refer to the same subject.—Compare, for example, Dan. 2:34, 35, 44; 7:18, 27; Matt. 6:10; 13:37-43; 35:34; 1 Tim. 4:1; Rev. 11:15-18.[pg 017]
[pg 005]PREFACE.The Apocalypse should be regarded as a peculiarly interesting portion of scripture: a blessing being promised those who read, hear, and keep the things which are written therein. It has been subjected to so many contradictory interpretations, that any attempt to comprehend its meaning is often regarded with distrust; and the impression has become very prevalent, that it is a“sealed book,”—that its meaning is so hidden in unintelligible symbols, that very little can be known respecting it; and that to attempt to unfold its meaning, is to tread presumptuously on forbidden ground.The attention of the Christian community has been called more of late to its study, by the publication of several elaborate Expositions. One in two large volumes, 8vo., by Prof. Stuart, was published at Andover, Mass., in 1845. A large 8vo. volume, by David N. Lord, was issued from the press of the Harpers, in New York, in 1847; and a smaller work, by Rev. Thomas Wickes, appeared in that city in 1851. These are the more important works on the subject which have been published in this country. In England, the“Horæ Apocalypticæ,”by the Rev. E. B. Elliott, A.M., late Vicar of Tuxford, and fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, has passed through several editions,—the fourth of which, in four large vols. 8vo., was published in London,[pg 006]in 1851. These works, with the writings of Habershon, Cunningham, Croly, Bickersteth, Birks, Brooks, Keith, and other distinguished English writers, have caused the study of the Apocalypse to be regarded with more favor of late than heretofore.The Expositions ofMr. Lordhave thrown much light on the nature and laws of symbols, by unfolding the principles in accordance with which they are used. The evolving of these has removed from many passages the obscurity which had before caused them to be regarded as enigmatical. There are, doubtless, many portions of the Apocalypse, the meaning of which is as yet only dimly perceived, and which will be more clearly unfolded by the transpiring of future events; and it would be arrogant to claim that its interpretation had been freed from all perplexities. But it is believed that it may be as profitably and as satisfactorily studied as other portions of Scripture; and that the reader may feel an assurance of approximating to a knowledge of the true meaning of its symbolic teachings.The Bible is its own interpreter; and when practicable, scripture should be explained by scripture. The meaning imputed to any passage must never contradict, but must harmonize with that of parallel texts. In illustrating the several references in the Apocalypse to the same events and epochs, a repetition of scripture is somewhat unavoidable.These pages have resulted from notes prepared in a familiar course of Bible-class instruction, where the study of brevity was necessary. Without designing to speak dogmatically, the didactic was found the more direct and simple mode of expression. In presenting this exposition, merely as the opinion of the writer, it is with the hope that it will give, in a small compass, a common-sense view of the intricacies of this book, and be acceptable to those interested in the study of prophecy.[pg 007]ELEMENTS OF PROPHETIC INTERPRETATION.1.The Grammarof any science is a development of the principles by which it is governed. As the science of interpretation must be founded on some fixed and uniform laws, the unfolding of these is the first step in the study of prophecy.2.Biblical ExegesisandSacred Hermeneutics, are terms applied to the science of interpretation, or of learning the meaning of Biblical words and phrases.3.The Usus Loquendi, is the usual mode of speaking. When applied to the Scriptures, it denotes the generalscriptural useof words.4. To learn the meaning of scriptural terms, their general use must be ascertained, by comparing their contexts in the several places of their occurrence.5.Prophecyis the prediction of a future event. The term sometimes denotes a book of prophecies (Rev. 22:18); and sometimes a history.—2 Chron. 9:29.6.ConsecutiveProphecy gives the succession of future events in the order in which they will transpire.Examples.—See Dan. 2d, 7th, 8th, 11th, and Rev. 6th and 7th, 9th to the 11th; 12th and 15th, &c.7.DiscursiveProphecy presents future events, irrespective of the order of their occurrence.Examples.—Isaiahand the minor prophets.8.ConditionalProphecy is when the fulfilment is dependent on the compliance of those to whom the promise is made, with the conditions on which it is given.Examples.—“Ifye walk in my statutes and keep my commandments, and do them: then I will give you rain in due season, and the land shall yield her increase, and the trees of the field shall yield their fruit.”Lev. 26:3, 4.“Butifye willnothearken unto me, and willnotdo all these commandments; andifye shall despise my statutes, or if your soul abhor my judgments, so that ye will not do all my commandments,butthat ye break my covenant: I also will do this unto you, I will even appoint over you terror, consumption, and the burning ague, that shall consume the[pg 008]eyes, and cause sorrow of heart: and ye shall sow your seed in vain; for your enemies shall eat it.”Ib.14-16.“And it shall come to pass,ifthou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe and to do all his commandments which I command thee this day: that the Lord thy God will set thee on high above all nations of the earth: and all these blessings shall come on thee, and overtake thee,ifthou shalt hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God.”Deut. 28:1, 2.“But it shall come to pass,ifthou wilt not hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe to do all his commandments and his statutes which I command thee this day: that all these curses shall come upon thee, and overtake thee,”&c.Ib.15.Predictions of mere national prosperity, or adversity, are usually conditional. When the condition is not expressed, it is implied.Example.—The Lord said unto Jonah,“Arise, go unto Nineveh, that great city, and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee.... And Jonah began to enter into the city a day's journey, and he cried, and said, Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown. So the people of Nineveh believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them even to the least of them.... And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of the evil that he had said that he would do unto them: and he did it not.”For all cases of this kind, the Lord has given the following generalRule:“At what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to pluck up, and to pull down, and to destroy it: if that nation against whom I have pronounced turn from their evil, I will repent of the evil that I thought to do unto them. And at what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to build and to plant it; if it do evil in my sight, that it obey not my voice, then I will repent of the good wherewith I said I would benefit them.”Jer. 18:7-10.9.UnconditionalProphecy includes all predictions which are absolute in their nature.Examples.—“But as truly as I live, all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord.”Num. 14:21.[pg 009]“For behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising.... For the nation and kingdom that will not serve thee shall perish; yea, those nations shall be utterly wasted.... Thy people also shall be all righteous: they shall inherit the land for ever, the branch of my planting, the work of my hands, that I may be glorified.”Isa. 60:2, 3, 12, 21.“But in the last days it shall come to pass, that the mountain of the house of the Lord shall be established in the top of the mountains, and it shall be exalted above the hills; and people shall flow unto it.”Micah 4:1.10. AVisionis a revelation fromGod, supernaturally presented. Future events are made to pass before the mind of theseer, as if actually transpiring.Examples.—See the prophecies ofIsaiah,Amos,Obadiah, &c.11. ASymbolic Visionis where the future events, instead of being presented to the mind of the prophet, are represented by analogous objects.Examples.—The prophecies ofEzekiel,Daniel,Zechariah, andJohn, are of this kind.12. ALiteralProphecy is where the prediction is given in words used according to their primary and natural import.Examples.—Num. 14:21-35; Jer. 25:1-33.13. Prophecy isfigurativewhen it abounds in tropes, as in much ofIsaiahand the minor prophets; and it is symbolic, when symbols instead of the objects themselves are presented—as inDanielandJohn.14.Poetryis writing thus constituted by the metrical or rhythmical structure of its sentences; and is not necessarily any more figurative or obscure than prose writing. It is, also, a term sometimes applied to the language of excited imagination and feeling.The Poetry of the Bible consists in Hebrew parallelisms, where the idea of the preceding line is repeated, or contrasted, in the succeeding one.Examples.—The Psalms,Isaiah, and other prophets.15.Highly Figurative, orSymbolicProphecies—the[pg 010]laws and use ofTropesandSymbolsbeing understood are not necessarily more equivocal, enigmatical or obscure, than those which are literal.16.Literal Fulfilmentof prophecy is prophecy fulfilled in accordance with thegrammatical interpretationof its language.17.Literal Interpretation, whentechnicallyapplied to the interpretation of prophecy, is not opposed to tropes or figures of speech, but tospiritualinterpretation. It interprets the language of the Scriptures, as similar language would be interpretedin all other writings.18.Spiritual Interpretation(mystical) seeks, in the language of Scripture, a meaning that is not expressed by any of the ordinary rules of language. It sets at defiance all the laws of language, and makes fancy the interpreter of prophecy.“It subjects clear predictions to an exegetical alembic that effectually subtilizes and evaporates their meaning.”—Bush.19.Ultra Literal Interpretationis a disregard of the peculiarities of symbols and of the several kinds of tropes—understanding them as if they wereliterallyexpressed.20.SymbolsandTropesareliterallyexplained, when interpreted in accordance with thegrammatical lawswhich respectively govern their use.21.Prophetic Symbolsare objects, real or imaginary,representativeof agents or objects possessing analogous characteristics. All agents or objectsseenin symbolic visions are symbols. The inspiredexplanationsof symbols are always literal, except when they are affirmed to be the same as some other symbol which represents the same object, as in Rev. 17:9.22.Laws of Symbols.I.“The Symbol and that which it represents resemble each other in the station they fill, the relation they sustain, and the agencies they exert in their respective spheres.”—Lord.II. The Symbol and that which it represents are of thesame, or they are ofdifferentspecies, kinds, or rank, according to thenatureanduseof the symbol.III.“When the Symbol is of such nature, or is used in such a relation that it can properly symbolise something[pg 011]differentfrom itself, the representative and that which it represents, while the counterpart of each other, are ofdifferentspecies, kinds, or rank.”—Lord.Example.—Dan. 7:3, beasts; v. 17, governments.IV.“Symbols that are of such a nature, station or relation, that there is nothing of an analogous kind that they can represent, symbolize agents, objects, acts, or events oftheir ownkind.”—Ib.Example.—Dan. 7:9.V.“When the Symbol and that which it symbolizes differ from each other, the correspondence between the representative and that which it represents, still extends to their chief parts; and the elements or parts of the symbols denote corresponding parts in that which is symbolized.”—Ib.VI.“The Names of Symbols are their literal and proper names, not metaphorical titles.”—Ib.VII.“A single agent, in many instances, symbolizes a body and succession of agents.”—Ib.VIII. Symbols of the same kind, and used in the same relations, always represent one class of objects; and when the office of a symbol has been once shown, the same symbol, similarly used, always fills a like office. They are never used arbitrarily.IX. While like symbols represent like objects, the same agents are often indicated by different symbols.Thus, a church may be symbolized by a city and a woman; and government, by a beast and a mountain, &c.23.Inspired Explanations of Symbolic Representations:—Ancient of Days—The Most High.—Dan. 7:9, 22.Candlesticks—Churches.—Rev. 1:20.Carpenters—Destroyers of governments.—Zech. 1:21.Days—Years.—Num. 14:34. Ezek. 4:4-6.Horns, of a wild beast—Kings or kingdoms succeeding to a divided empire.—Dan. 8:22 and 7:24.Heads, of a wild beast—Kings or forms of government.—Rev. 17:9, 10.Image, of different metals—A succession of governments.—Dan. 2:37-42.Incense, or odors—Prayers.—Rev. 5:8 and 8:4.Lamb, the—Christ.—Rev. 5:6, 9, 10.Lamb's wife—Risen saints.—Rev. 19:7, 8.Lake of fire and brimstone—The place of the second death.—Rev. 20:15.Likeness of a man—The Lord.—Ezek. 1:26, 28, and 8:2, 4.Linen, fine and clean—Righteousness of saints—Rev. 19:8.Mountains—Kings, or forms of government.—Rev. 17:9, 10.New Jerusalem—The redeemed Church, or the Bride, the Lamb's wife.—Rev. 21:9, 10.Revivification of dry bones—Resurrection of the dead.—Ezek. 37:11, 12.Stars—Angels,i.e., messengers of the churches.—Rev. 1:20.Souls of martyrs living again—The first resurrection.—Rev. 20:4, 5.Stone, becoming a mountain—Kingdom of God.—Dan. 2:45.Waters—Peoples.—Rev. 17:15.Wild Beasts—Governments.—Dan. 7:17.Woman—A city.—Rev. 17:18. Explained to be a church.—21:9, 10.24.Tropesare figures of various kinds, used toillustratethe subjects to which they are applied.—They embrace the Simile, Metaphor, Prosopopœia, Apostrophe, Synecdoche, Allegory, &c.25.Laws of Figures—(a.)“The terms in which they are expressed are used in their ordinary and literal sense.”—Lord.(b.)“The agents or objects to which figures are applied are always expressly mentioned. Figures, in that respect, differ wholly from symbols, which never formally indicate, unless an interpretation is given, who the agents, or what the objects are which they represent.”—Ib.(c.)“The figurative terms are always predicates, or are employed in affirming something of some other agent or object; and are therefore either nouns, verbs, adjectives or adverbs.”—Ib.(d.)“As their terms are used literally, the figure lies, when they are employed in an unusual manner, simply in[pg 013]their being applied to objects to which they do not properly belong.”—Ib.(e.)“They are used accordingly in all such cases for the purpose of illustration, and their explication is accomplished, not by assigning to them some new and extraordinary meaning, but simply by conjoining with them the terms of a comparison which expresses the relation in which they are employed.”—Ib.(f.)“It is in metaphors and personification only that acts and qualities are ascribed to agents and objects that are incompatible with their nature; or do not properly belong to them.”—Ib. Theo. & Lit. Jour., vol. 1, p. 354.26. ASimile, or comparison, is an affirmation that one agent, object, or act, islike, or as, another,—there being a real or imaginary resemblance. Sometimes only the mere fact of a resemblance is affirmed. At others, the nature of the resemblance is indicated.Examples.—“As for man, his days areasgrass.”Psa. 103:15.“Whose garment waswhiteassnow.”Dan. 7:9.27.Antithesisis a contrast, or placing in opposite lights things dissimilar.Example.—“The wicked are overthrown and are not; but the house of the righteous shall stand.”Prov. 12:7.28. AMetaphoris a simile comprised in a word, without thesignof comparison. It is an affirmation of an object, incompatible with its nature—i.e., it affirms that an object is, what literally it is onlylike; or attributes to it acts, to which its acts only bear aresemblance.Examples.—“He is theRock.”Deut. 32:4.“Her gates shalllamentandmourn.”Isa. 3:25.A metaphor may be a simple affirmation of what an object is, or it may embrace“the agent, the act, the object, and the effect of an action.”—Lord.(a.) When an object is affirmed to be what it only resembles, that of which the affirmation is made is alwaysliterallyexpressed.(b.)“When a nature is ascribed to an object that does not belong to it, the acts or results affirmed to it are proper to thatimputed nature, not to its own.”—Lord.[pg 014](c.)“The meaning of a metaphorical passage is precisely what it would be if a comparison only were affirmed.”—Ib.29.An Elliptical Metaphoris where the figure is incomplete. An object, instead of being affirmed to be what it only resembles, is introduced by the name proper only to that resemblance. The literal name of the object and the affirmation to complete the figure are to be supplied.To find the meaning of an elliptical metaphor, trace the word through the Bible, and find to what object such metaphorical term is applied.Example.—“And in that day there shall be aRootofJesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people.”Isa. 11:10.Explanation.—“I [Jesus] am theRootand the offspring ofDavid.”Rev. 22:16.30.Prosopœia, orPersonification, is an address to an inanimate object, as if it were a person, and had intelligence.—Lord.Example.—“Give ear, O ye heavens, and I will speak; and hear, O earth, the words of my mouth.”Deut. 32:1.31.An Apostropheis adigressionfrom the order of any discourse, and a directaddressto the persons of whom it treats, or to those who are to form a judgment respecting the subject of which it treats.—Lord.Example.—“Hear the word of theLord, ye rulers of Sodom: give ear unto the law of ourGod, ye people of Gomorrah.”Isa. 1:10.32.An Allegoryis a narrative in which the subject of the discourse is described by an analogous subject, resembling it in its characteristics and circumstances—the subject of which it is descriptive being indicated in its connection.Examples.—See Ezek. 31:3-9; Ps. 80:8-16; Jud. 9:8-15.Pasthistoricalevents, instead of supposititious ones, are sometimes used for illustration. When thus used they serve as allegories, without affecting their original historical significance.Example.—Gal. 4: 22-31. See also Rom. 9:7, 8; 1 Cor. 9:9, 10, and 10:11.33.A Parableis a similitude taken from natural things, to instruct us in the knowledge of spiritual.Examples.—Matt. 13th, and 21:28-41.The Parable differs from the Allegory in that the acts ascribed are appropriate to the agents to which they are attributed.[pg 015]In the Allegory, acts may be ascribed to real objects which are not natural to those objects.Example.—See Judges 9:7-15.The Parable is sometimes used to denote a prophecy, (Num. 23:7); sometimes a discourse, (Job 27:1); sometimes a lamentation, (Micah 2:4); sometimes a proverb, or wise saying, (Prov. 26:7); and sometimes to indicate that a thing is apocryphal. Ezek. 20:49. The terms parable and allegory, are often wrongfully applied.34.A Riddleis an enigma—something to be guessed.Example.—See Judges 14:24-18. It is sometimes used to denote an allegory. Ezek. 17:1-10.35.Typesare emblems—greater events in the future being prefigured by typical observances,“which are a shadow of good things to come.”Col. 2:17.36.The Hypocatastasis, or substitution, is a figure introduced by Mr.Lord, in which the objects, or agents, of one class are, without any formal notice, employed in the place of the persons or things of which the passages in which they occur treat; and they are exhibited either as exerting, or as subjected to an agency proper to their nature, in order to represent by analogy, the agency which those persons are to exert, or of which those things are to be the subjects.Example.—“O, my people, they which lead thee cause thee to err, and destroy the way of thy paths.”—Isa. 3:12,—expressive of the manner in which they were misled by their rulers and kept from the truth.37.A Metonymyis a reversion, or the use of a noun to express that with which it is intimately connected, instead of using the term which would literally express the idea. Thus the cause is used for the effect, the effect for the cause, the thing containing for that which is contained in it, &c.Example.—“Ye have eaten up thevineyard.”Isa. 3:14—meaning the fruit of the vineyard.38.A Synecdocheis the use of a word expressive of a part, to signify the whole; or that expressive of the whole, to denote only a part—as the genus for the species, or the species for the genus, &c.Example.—“Mandieth and wasteth away; yeamangiveth up the ghost, and where is he?”Job 14:10.39.A Hyperboleis an exaggeration in which more is[pg 016]expressed than is intended to be understood.Example.—“I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written.”John 21:25—meaning that a great number might be written.40.Ironyis the utterance of pointed remarks, contrary to the actual thoughts of the speaker or writer—not to deceive, but to add force to the remark.Examples.—“No doubt but ye are the people, and wisdom shall die with you.”Job 12:2.“And it came to pass at noon, that Elijah mocked them, and said, Cry aloud: for heisa god: either he is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradventure he sleepeth and must be awaked.”1 Kings 18:27.41.The Interrogation—while its legitimate use is to ask a question—is also used to affirm or deny with great emphasis. Affirmative interrogations usually havenoornotin connection with the verb.Example.—“IsnotGod in the height of the heavens?”Job 22:12.Examples of a negative.—“Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? or shall a nation be born at once?”Isa. 66:8.“Can the rush grow up without mire?”Job 8:11.42.Exclamationsare digressions from the order of a discourse or writing, to give expression to the emotions of the speaker, or writer.Example.—“O that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away and be at rest!”Psa. 55:6.43.Fablesare fictions—additions to the word ofGod. All false theories and doctrines supposed to be based on the Bible, all interpretations of Scripture which do violence to the laws of language and falsify their meaning, and all opinions which are the result of mere traditions and doctrines of men, are to be classed as fables. Mark 7:8-13; 1 Pet. 1:18; 1 Tim. 1:4; 4:7; Tit. 1:14.44.Synchronous Scripturesare the several passages which have reference to any one and the same event.Each portion of Scripture respecting any subject, must be considered in connection with all the Scriptures that refer to the same subject.—Compare, for example, Dan. 2:34, 35, 44; 7:18, 27; Matt. 6:10; 13:37-43; 35:34; 1 Tim. 4:1; Rev. 11:15-18.[pg 017]
PREFACE.The Apocalypse should be regarded as a peculiarly interesting portion of scripture: a blessing being promised those who read, hear, and keep the things which are written therein. It has been subjected to so many contradictory interpretations, that any attempt to comprehend its meaning is often regarded with distrust; and the impression has become very prevalent, that it is a“sealed book,”—that its meaning is so hidden in unintelligible symbols, that very little can be known respecting it; and that to attempt to unfold its meaning, is to tread presumptuously on forbidden ground.The attention of the Christian community has been called more of late to its study, by the publication of several elaborate Expositions. One in two large volumes, 8vo., by Prof. Stuart, was published at Andover, Mass., in 1845. A large 8vo. volume, by David N. Lord, was issued from the press of the Harpers, in New York, in 1847; and a smaller work, by Rev. Thomas Wickes, appeared in that city in 1851. These are the more important works on the subject which have been published in this country. In England, the“Horæ Apocalypticæ,”by the Rev. E. B. Elliott, A.M., late Vicar of Tuxford, and fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, has passed through several editions,—the fourth of which, in four large vols. 8vo., was published in London,[pg 006]in 1851. These works, with the writings of Habershon, Cunningham, Croly, Bickersteth, Birks, Brooks, Keith, and other distinguished English writers, have caused the study of the Apocalypse to be regarded with more favor of late than heretofore.The Expositions ofMr. Lordhave thrown much light on the nature and laws of symbols, by unfolding the principles in accordance with which they are used. The evolving of these has removed from many passages the obscurity which had before caused them to be regarded as enigmatical. There are, doubtless, many portions of the Apocalypse, the meaning of which is as yet only dimly perceived, and which will be more clearly unfolded by the transpiring of future events; and it would be arrogant to claim that its interpretation had been freed from all perplexities. But it is believed that it may be as profitably and as satisfactorily studied as other portions of Scripture; and that the reader may feel an assurance of approximating to a knowledge of the true meaning of its symbolic teachings.The Bible is its own interpreter; and when practicable, scripture should be explained by scripture. The meaning imputed to any passage must never contradict, but must harmonize with that of parallel texts. In illustrating the several references in the Apocalypse to the same events and epochs, a repetition of scripture is somewhat unavoidable.These pages have resulted from notes prepared in a familiar course of Bible-class instruction, where the study of brevity was necessary. Without designing to speak dogmatically, the didactic was found the more direct and simple mode of expression. In presenting this exposition, merely as the opinion of the writer, it is with the hope that it will give, in a small compass, a common-sense view of the intricacies of this book, and be acceptable to those interested in the study of prophecy.
The Apocalypse should be regarded as a peculiarly interesting portion of scripture: a blessing being promised those who read, hear, and keep the things which are written therein. It has been subjected to so many contradictory interpretations, that any attempt to comprehend its meaning is often regarded with distrust; and the impression has become very prevalent, that it is a“sealed book,”—that its meaning is so hidden in unintelligible symbols, that very little can be known respecting it; and that to attempt to unfold its meaning, is to tread presumptuously on forbidden ground.
The attention of the Christian community has been called more of late to its study, by the publication of several elaborate Expositions. One in two large volumes, 8vo., by Prof. Stuart, was published at Andover, Mass., in 1845. A large 8vo. volume, by David N. Lord, was issued from the press of the Harpers, in New York, in 1847; and a smaller work, by Rev. Thomas Wickes, appeared in that city in 1851. These are the more important works on the subject which have been published in this country. In England, the“Horæ Apocalypticæ,”by the Rev. E. B. Elliott, A.M., late Vicar of Tuxford, and fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, has passed through several editions,—the fourth of which, in four large vols. 8vo., was published in London,[pg 006]in 1851. These works, with the writings of Habershon, Cunningham, Croly, Bickersteth, Birks, Brooks, Keith, and other distinguished English writers, have caused the study of the Apocalypse to be regarded with more favor of late than heretofore.
The Expositions ofMr. Lordhave thrown much light on the nature and laws of symbols, by unfolding the principles in accordance with which they are used. The evolving of these has removed from many passages the obscurity which had before caused them to be regarded as enigmatical. There are, doubtless, many portions of the Apocalypse, the meaning of which is as yet only dimly perceived, and which will be more clearly unfolded by the transpiring of future events; and it would be arrogant to claim that its interpretation had been freed from all perplexities. But it is believed that it may be as profitably and as satisfactorily studied as other portions of Scripture; and that the reader may feel an assurance of approximating to a knowledge of the true meaning of its symbolic teachings.
The Bible is its own interpreter; and when practicable, scripture should be explained by scripture. The meaning imputed to any passage must never contradict, but must harmonize with that of parallel texts. In illustrating the several references in the Apocalypse to the same events and epochs, a repetition of scripture is somewhat unavoidable.
These pages have resulted from notes prepared in a familiar course of Bible-class instruction, where the study of brevity was necessary. Without designing to speak dogmatically, the didactic was found the more direct and simple mode of expression. In presenting this exposition, merely as the opinion of the writer, it is with the hope that it will give, in a small compass, a common-sense view of the intricacies of this book, and be acceptable to those interested in the study of prophecy.
ELEMENTS OF PROPHETIC INTERPRETATION.1.The Grammarof any science is a development of the principles by which it is governed. As the science of interpretation must be founded on some fixed and uniform laws, the unfolding of these is the first step in the study of prophecy.2.Biblical ExegesisandSacred Hermeneutics, are terms applied to the science of interpretation, or of learning the meaning of Biblical words and phrases.3.The Usus Loquendi, is the usual mode of speaking. When applied to the Scriptures, it denotes the generalscriptural useof words.4. To learn the meaning of scriptural terms, their general use must be ascertained, by comparing their contexts in the several places of their occurrence.5.Prophecyis the prediction of a future event. The term sometimes denotes a book of prophecies (Rev. 22:18); and sometimes a history.—2 Chron. 9:29.6.ConsecutiveProphecy gives the succession of future events in the order in which they will transpire.Examples.—See Dan. 2d, 7th, 8th, 11th, and Rev. 6th and 7th, 9th to the 11th; 12th and 15th, &c.7.DiscursiveProphecy presents future events, irrespective of the order of their occurrence.Examples.—Isaiahand the minor prophets.8.ConditionalProphecy is when the fulfilment is dependent on the compliance of those to whom the promise is made, with the conditions on which it is given.Examples.—“Ifye walk in my statutes and keep my commandments, and do them: then I will give you rain in due season, and the land shall yield her increase, and the trees of the field shall yield their fruit.”Lev. 26:3, 4.“Butifye willnothearken unto me, and willnotdo all these commandments; andifye shall despise my statutes, or if your soul abhor my judgments, so that ye will not do all my commandments,butthat ye break my covenant: I also will do this unto you, I will even appoint over you terror, consumption, and the burning ague, that shall consume the[pg 008]eyes, and cause sorrow of heart: and ye shall sow your seed in vain; for your enemies shall eat it.”Ib.14-16.“And it shall come to pass,ifthou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe and to do all his commandments which I command thee this day: that the Lord thy God will set thee on high above all nations of the earth: and all these blessings shall come on thee, and overtake thee,ifthou shalt hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God.”Deut. 28:1, 2.“But it shall come to pass,ifthou wilt not hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe to do all his commandments and his statutes which I command thee this day: that all these curses shall come upon thee, and overtake thee,”&c.Ib.15.Predictions of mere national prosperity, or adversity, are usually conditional. When the condition is not expressed, it is implied.Example.—The Lord said unto Jonah,“Arise, go unto Nineveh, that great city, and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee.... And Jonah began to enter into the city a day's journey, and he cried, and said, Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown. So the people of Nineveh believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them even to the least of them.... And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of the evil that he had said that he would do unto them: and he did it not.”For all cases of this kind, the Lord has given the following generalRule:“At what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to pluck up, and to pull down, and to destroy it: if that nation against whom I have pronounced turn from their evil, I will repent of the evil that I thought to do unto them. And at what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to build and to plant it; if it do evil in my sight, that it obey not my voice, then I will repent of the good wherewith I said I would benefit them.”Jer. 18:7-10.9.UnconditionalProphecy includes all predictions which are absolute in their nature.Examples.—“But as truly as I live, all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord.”Num. 14:21.[pg 009]“For behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising.... For the nation and kingdom that will not serve thee shall perish; yea, those nations shall be utterly wasted.... Thy people also shall be all righteous: they shall inherit the land for ever, the branch of my planting, the work of my hands, that I may be glorified.”Isa. 60:2, 3, 12, 21.“But in the last days it shall come to pass, that the mountain of the house of the Lord shall be established in the top of the mountains, and it shall be exalted above the hills; and people shall flow unto it.”Micah 4:1.10. AVisionis a revelation fromGod, supernaturally presented. Future events are made to pass before the mind of theseer, as if actually transpiring.Examples.—See the prophecies ofIsaiah,Amos,Obadiah, &c.11. ASymbolic Visionis where the future events, instead of being presented to the mind of the prophet, are represented by analogous objects.Examples.—The prophecies ofEzekiel,Daniel,Zechariah, andJohn, are of this kind.12. ALiteralProphecy is where the prediction is given in words used according to their primary and natural import.Examples.—Num. 14:21-35; Jer. 25:1-33.13. Prophecy isfigurativewhen it abounds in tropes, as in much ofIsaiahand the minor prophets; and it is symbolic, when symbols instead of the objects themselves are presented—as inDanielandJohn.14.Poetryis writing thus constituted by the metrical or rhythmical structure of its sentences; and is not necessarily any more figurative or obscure than prose writing. It is, also, a term sometimes applied to the language of excited imagination and feeling.The Poetry of the Bible consists in Hebrew parallelisms, where the idea of the preceding line is repeated, or contrasted, in the succeeding one.Examples.—The Psalms,Isaiah, and other prophets.15.Highly Figurative, orSymbolicProphecies—the[pg 010]laws and use ofTropesandSymbolsbeing understood are not necessarily more equivocal, enigmatical or obscure, than those which are literal.16.Literal Fulfilmentof prophecy is prophecy fulfilled in accordance with thegrammatical interpretationof its language.17.Literal Interpretation, whentechnicallyapplied to the interpretation of prophecy, is not opposed to tropes or figures of speech, but tospiritualinterpretation. It interprets the language of the Scriptures, as similar language would be interpretedin all other writings.18.Spiritual Interpretation(mystical) seeks, in the language of Scripture, a meaning that is not expressed by any of the ordinary rules of language. It sets at defiance all the laws of language, and makes fancy the interpreter of prophecy.“It subjects clear predictions to an exegetical alembic that effectually subtilizes and evaporates their meaning.”—Bush.19.Ultra Literal Interpretationis a disregard of the peculiarities of symbols and of the several kinds of tropes—understanding them as if they wereliterallyexpressed.20.SymbolsandTropesareliterallyexplained, when interpreted in accordance with thegrammatical lawswhich respectively govern their use.21.Prophetic Symbolsare objects, real or imaginary,representativeof agents or objects possessing analogous characteristics. All agents or objectsseenin symbolic visions are symbols. The inspiredexplanationsof symbols are always literal, except when they are affirmed to be the same as some other symbol which represents the same object, as in Rev. 17:9.22.Laws of Symbols.I.“The Symbol and that which it represents resemble each other in the station they fill, the relation they sustain, and the agencies they exert in their respective spheres.”—Lord.II. The Symbol and that which it represents are of thesame, or they are ofdifferentspecies, kinds, or rank, according to thenatureanduseof the symbol.III.“When the Symbol is of such nature, or is used in such a relation that it can properly symbolise something[pg 011]differentfrom itself, the representative and that which it represents, while the counterpart of each other, are ofdifferentspecies, kinds, or rank.”—Lord.Example.—Dan. 7:3, beasts; v. 17, governments.IV.“Symbols that are of such a nature, station or relation, that there is nothing of an analogous kind that they can represent, symbolize agents, objects, acts, or events oftheir ownkind.”—Ib.Example.—Dan. 7:9.V.“When the Symbol and that which it symbolizes differ from each other, the correspondence between the representative and that which it represents, still extends to their chief parts; and the elements or parts of the symbols denote corresponding parts in that which is symbolized.”—Ib.VI.“The Names of Symbols are their literal and proper names, not metaphorical titles.”—Ib.VII.“A single agent, in many instances, symbolizes a body and succession of agents.”—Ib.VIII. Symbols of the same kind, and used in the same relations, always represent one class of objects; and when the office of a symbol has been once shown, the same symbol, similarly used, always fills a like office. They are never used arbitrarily.IX. While like symbols represent like objects, the same agents are often indicated by different symbols.Thus, a church may be symbolized by a city and a woman; and government, by a beast and a mountain, &c.23.Inspired Explanations of Symbolic Representations:—Ancient of Days—The Most High.—Dan. 7:9, 22.Candlesticks—Churches.—Rev. 1:20.Carpenters—Destroyers of governments.—Zech. 1:21.Days—Years.—Num. 14:34. Ezek. 4:4-6.Horns, of a wild beast—Kings or kingdoms succeeding to a divided empire.—Dan. 8:22 and 7:24.Heads, of a wild beast—Kings or forms of government.—Rev. 17:9, 10.Image, of different metals—A succession of governments.—Dan. 2:37-42.Incense, or odors—Prayers.—Rev. 5:8 and 8:4.Lamb, the—Christ.—Rev. 5:6, 9, 10.Lamb's wife—Risen saints.—Rev. 19:7, 8.Lake of fire and brimstone—The place of the second death.—Rev. 20:15.Likeness of a man—The Lord.—Ezek. 1:26, 28, and 8:2, 4.Linen, fine and clean—Righteousness of saints—Rev. 19:8.Mountains—Kings, or forms of government.—Rev. 17:9, 10.New Jerusalem—The redeemed Church, or the Bride, the Lamb's wife.—Rev. 21:9, 10.Revivification of dry bones—Resurrection of the dead.—Ezek. 37:11, 12.Stars—Angels,i.e., messengers of the churches.—Rev. 1:20.Souls of martyrs living again—The first resurrection.—Rev. 20:4, 5.Stone, becoming a mountain—Kingdom of God.—Dan. 2:45.Waters—Peoples.—Rev. 17:15.Wild Beasts—Governments.—Dan. 7:17.Woman—A city.—Rev. 17:18. Explained to be a church.—21:9, 10.24.Tropesare figures of various kinds, used toillustratethe subjects to which they are applied.—They embrace the Simile, Metaphor, Prosopopœia, Apostrophe, Synecdoche, Allegory, &c.25.Laws of Figures—(a.)“The terms in which they are expressed are used in their ordinary and literal sense.”—Lord.(b.)“The agents or objects to which figures are applied are always expressly mentioned. Figures, in that respect, differ wholly from symbols, which never formally indicate, unless an interpretation is given, who the agents, or what the objects are which they represent.”—Ib.(c.)“The figurative terms are always predicates, or are employed in affirming something of some other agent or object; and are therefore either nouns, verbs, adjectives or adverbs.”—Ib.(d.)“As their terms are used literally, the figure lies, when they are employed in an unusual manner, simply in[pg 013]their being applied to objects to which they do not properly belong.”—Ib.(e.)“They are used accordingly in all such cases for the purpose of illustration, and their explication is accomplished, not by assigning to them some new and extraordinary meaning, but simply by conjoining with them the terms of a comparison which expresses the relation in which they are employed.”—Ib.(f.)“It is in metaphors and personification only that acts and qualities are ascribed to agents and objects that are incompatible with their nature; or do not properly belong to them.”—Ib. Theo. & Lit. Jour., vol. 1, p. 354.26. ASimile, or comparison, is an affirmation that one agent, object, or act, islike, or as, another,—there being a real or imaginary resemblance. Sometimes only the mere fact of a resemblance is affirmed. At others, the nature of the resemblance is indicated.Examples.—“As for man, his days areasgrass.”Psa. 103:15.“Whose garment waswhiteassnow.”Dan. 7:9.27.Antithesisis a contrast, or placing in opposite lights things dissimilar.Example.—“The wicked are overthrown and are not; but the house of the righteous shall stand.”Prov. 12:7.28. AMetaphoris a simile comprised in a word, without thesignof comparison. It is an affirmation of an object, incompatible with its nature—i.e., it affirms that an object is, what literally it is onlylike; or attributes to it acts, to which its acts only bear aresemblance.Examples.—“He is theRock.”Deut. 32:4.“Her gates shalllamentandmourn.”Isa. 3:25.A metaphor may be a simple affirmation of what an object is, or it may embrace“the agent, the act, the object, and the effect of an action.”—Lord.(a.) When an object is affirmed to be what it only resembles, that of which the affirmation is made is alwaysliterallyexpressed.(b.)“When a nature is ascribed to an object that does not belong to it, the acts or results affirmed to it are proper to thatimputed nature, not to its own.”—Lord.[pg 014](c.)“The meaning of a metaphorical passage is precisely what it would be if a comparison only were affirmed.”—Ib.29.An Elliptical Metaphoris where the figure is incomplete. An object, instead of being affirmed to be what it only resembles, is introduced by the name proper only to that resemblance. The literal name of the object and the affirmation to complete the figure are to be supplied.To find the meaning of an elliptical metaphor, trace the word through the Bible, and find to what object such metaphorical term is applied.Example.—“And in that day there shall be aRootofJesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people.”Isa. 11:10.Explanation.—“I [Jesus] am theRootand the offspring ofDavid.”Rev. 22:16.30.Prosopœia, orPersonification, is an address to an inanimate object, as if it were a person, and had intelligence.—Lord.Example.—“Give ear, O ye heavens, and I will speak; and hear, O earth, the words of my mouth.”Deut. 32:1.31.An Apostropheis adigressionfrom the order of any discourse, and a directaddressto the persons of whom it treats, or to those who are to form a judgment respecting the subject of which it treats.—Lord.Example.—“Hear the word of theLord, ye rulers of Sodom: give ear unto the law of ourGod, ye people of Gomorrah.”Isa. 1:10.32.An Allegoryis a narrative in which the subject of the discourse is described by an analogous subject, resembling it in its characteristics and circumstances—the subject of which it is descriptive being indicated in its connection.Examples.—See Ezek. 31:3-9; Ps. 80:8-16; Jud. 9:8-15.Pasthistoricalevents, instead of supposititious ones, are sometimes used for illustration. When thus used they serve as allegories, without affecting their original historical significance.Example.—Gal. 4: 22-31. See also Rom. 9:7, 8; 1 Cor. 9:9, 10, and 10:11.33.A Parableis a similitude taken from natural things, to instruct us in the knowledge of spiritual.Examples.—Matt. 13th, and 21:28-41.The Parable differs from the Allegory in that the acts ascribed are appropriate to the agents to which they are attributed.[pg 015]In the Allegory, acts may be ascribed to real objects which are not natural to those objects.Example.—See Judges 9:7-15.The Parable is sometimes used to denote a prophecy, (Num. 23:7); sometimes a discourse, (Job 27:1); sometimes a lamentation, (Micah 2:4); sometimes a proverb, or wise saying, (Prov. 26:7); and sometimes to indicate that a thing is apocryphal. Ezek. 20:49. The terms parable and allegory, are often wrongfully applied.34.A Riddleis an enigma—something to be guessed.Example.—See Judges 14:24-18. It is sometimes used to denote an allegory. Ezek. 17:1-10.35.Typesare emblems—greater events in the future being prefigured by typical observances,“which are a shadow of good things to come.”Col. 2:17.36.The Hypocatastasis, or substitution, is a figure introduced by Mr.Lord, in which the objects, or agents, of one class are, without any formal notice, employed in the place of the persons or things of which the passages in which they occur treat; and they are exhibited either as exerting, or as subjected to an agency proper to their nature, in order to represent by analogy, the agency which those persons are to exert, or of which those things are to be the subjects.Example.—“O, my people, they which lead thee cause thee to err, and destroy the way of thy paths.”—Isa. 3:12,—expressive of the manner in which they were misled by their rulers and kept from the truth.37.A Metonymyis a reversion, or the use of a noun to express that with which it is intimately connected, instead of using the term which would literally express the idea. Thus the cause is used for the effect, the effect for the cause, the thing containing for that which is contained in it, &c.Example.—“Ye have eaten up thevineyard.”Isa. 3:14—meaning the fruit of the vineyard.38.A Synecdocheis the use of a word expressive of a part, to signify the whole; or that expressive of the whole, to denote only a part—as the genus for the species, or the species for the genus, &c.Example.—“Mandieth and wasteth away; yeamangiveth up the ghost, and where is he?”Job 14:10.39.A Hyperboleis an exaggeration in which more is[pg 016]expressed than is intended to be understood.Example.—“I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written.”John 21:25—meaning that a great number might be written.40.Ironyis the utterance of pointed remarks, contrary to the actual thoughts of the speaker or writer—not to deceive, but to add force to the remark.Examples.—“No doubt but ye are the people, and wisdom shall die with you.”Job 12:2.“And it came to pass at noon, that Elijah mocked them, and said, Cry aloud: for heisa god: either he is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradventure he sleepeth and must be awaked.”1 Kings 18:27.41.The Interrogation—while its legitimate use is to ask a question—is also used to affirm or deny with great emphasis. Affirmative interrogations usually havenoornotin connection with the verb.Example.—“IsnotGod in the height of the heavens?”Job 22:12.Examples of a negative.—“Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? or shall a nation be born at once?”Isa. 66:8.“Can the rush grow up without mire?”Job 8:11.42.Exclamationsare digressions from the order of a discourse or writing, to give expression to the emotions of the speaker, or writer.Example.—“O that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away and be at rest!”Psa. 55:6.43.Fablesare fictions—additions to the word ofGod. All false theories and doctrines supposed to be based on the Bible, all interpretations of Scripture which do violence to the laws of language and falsify their meaning, and all opinions which are the result of mere traditions and doctrines of men, are to be classed as fables. Mark 7:8-13; 1 Pet. 1:18; 1 Tim. 1:4; 4:7; Tit. 1:14.44.Synchronous Scripturesare the several passages which have reference to any one and the same event.Each portion of Scripture respecting any subject, must be considered in connection with all the Scriptures that refer to the same subject.—Compare, for example, Dan. 2:34, 35, 44; 7:18, 27; Matt. 6:10; 13:37-43; 35:34; 1 Tim. 4:1; Rev. 11:15-18.
1.The Grammarof any science is a development of the principles by which it is governed. As the science of interpretation must be founded on some fixed and uniform laws, the unfolding of these is the first step in the study of prophecy.
2.Biblical ExegesisandSacred Hermeneutics, are terms applied to the science of interpretation, or of learning the meaning of Biblical words and phrases.
3.The Usus Loquendi, is the usual mode of speaking. When applied to the Scriptures, it denotes the generalscriptural useof words.
4. To learn the meaning of scriptural terms, their general use must be ascertained, by comparing their contexts in the several places of their occurrence.
5.Prophecyis the prediction of a future event. The term sometimes denotes a book of prophecies (Rev. 22:18); and sometimes a history.—2 Chron. 9:29.
6.ConsecutiveProphecy gives the succession of future events in the order in which they will transpire.Examples.—See Dan. 2d, 7th, 8th, 11th, and Rev. 6th and 7th, 9th to the 11th; 12th and 15th, &c.
7.DiscursiveProphecy presents future events, irrespective of the order of their occurrence.Examples.—Isaiahand the minor prophets.
8.ConditionalProphecy is when the fulfilment is dependent on the compliance of those to whom the promise is made, with the conditions on which it is given.Examples.—“Ifye walk in my statutes and keep my commandments, and do them: then I will give you rain in due season, and the land shall yield her increase, and the trees of the field shall yield their fruit.”Lev. 26:3, 4.“Butifye willnothearken unto me, and willnotdo all these commandments; andifye shall despise my statutes, or if your soul abhor my judgments, so that ye will not do all my commandments,butthat ye break my covenant: I also will do this unto you, I will even appoint over you terror, consumption, and the burning ague, that shall consume the[pg 008]eyes, and cause sorrow of heart: and ye shall sow your seed in vain; for your enemies shall eat it.”Ib.14-16.
“And it shall come to pass,ifthou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe and to do all his commandments which I command thee this day: that the Lord thy God will set thee on high above all nations of the earth: and all these blessings shall come on thee, and overtake thee,ifthou shalt hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God.”Deut. 28:1, 2.“But it shall come to pass,ifthou wilt not hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe to do all his commandments and his statutes which I command thee this day: that all these curses shall come upon thee, and overtake thee,”&c.Ib.15.
Predictions of mere national prosperity, or adversity, are usually conditional. When the condition is not expressed, it is implied.Example.—The Lord said unto Jonah,“Arise, go unto Nineveh, that great city, and preach unto it the preaching that I bid thee.... And Jonah began to enter into the city a day's journey, and he cried, and said, Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown. So the people of Nineveh believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them even to the least of them.... And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of the evil that he had said that he would do unto them: and he did it not.”
For all cases of this kind, the Lord has given the following generalRule:“At what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to pluck up, and to pull down, and to destroy it: if that nation against whom I have pronounced turn from their evil, I will repent of the evil that I thought to do unto them. And at what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to build and to plant it; if it do evil in my sight, that it obey not my voice, then I will repent of the good wherewith I said I would benefit them.”Jer. 18:7-10.
9.UnconditionalProphecy includes all predictions which are absolute in their nature.Examples.—“But as truly as I live, all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord.”Num. 14:21.
“For behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising.... For the nation and kingdom that will not serve thee shall perish; yea, those nations shall be utterly wasted.... Thy people also shall be all righteous: they shall inherit the land for ever, the branch of my planting, the work of my hands, that I may be glorified.”Isa. 60:2, 3, 12, 21.
“But in the last days it shall come to pass, that the mountain of the house of the Lord shall be established in the top of the mountains, and it shall be exalted above the hills; and people shall flow unto it.”Micah 4:1.
10. AVisionis a revelation fromGod, supernaturally presented. Future events are made to pass before the mind of theseer, as if actually transpiring.Examples.—See the prophecies ofIsaiah,Amos,Obadiah, &c.
11. ASymbolic Visionis where the future events, instead of being presented to the mind of the prophet, are represented by analogous objects.Examples.—The prophecies ofEzekiel,Daniel,Zechariah, andJohn, are of this kind.
12. ALiteralProphecy is where the prediction is given in words used according to their primary and natural import.Examples.—Num. 14:21-35; Jer. 25:1-33.
13. Prophecy isfigurativewhen it abounds in tropes, as in much ofIsaiahand the minor prophets; and it is symbolic, when symbols instead of the objects themselves are presented—as inDanielandJohn.
14.Poetryis writing thus constituted by the metrical or rhythmical structure of its sentences; and is not necessarily any more figurative or obscure than prose writing. It is, also, a term sometimes applied to the language of excited imagination and feeling.
The Poetry of the Bible consists in Hebrew parallelisms, where the idea of the preceding line is repeated, or contrasted, in the succeeding one.Examples.—The Psalms,Isaiah, and other prophets.
15.Highly Figurative, orSymbolicProphecies—the[pg 010]laws and use ofTropesandSymbolsbeing understood are not necessarily more equivocal, enigmatical or obscure, than those which are literal.
16.Literal Fulfilmentof prophecy is prophecy fulfilled in accordance with thegrammatical interpretationof its language.
17.Literal Interpretation, whentechnicallyapplied to the interpretation of prophecy, is not opposed to tropes or figures of speech, but tospiritualinterpretation. It interprets the language of the Scriptures, as similar language would be interpretedin all other writings.
18.Spiritual Interpretation(mystical) seeks, in the language of Scripture, a meaning that is not expressed by any of the ordinary rules of language. It sets at defiance all the laws of language, and makes fancy the interpreter of prophecy.“It subjects clear predictions to an exegetical alembic that effectually subtilizes and evaporates their meaning.”—Bush.
19.Ultra Literal Interpretationis a disregard of the peculiarities of symbols and of the several kinds of tropes—understanding them as if they wereliterallyexpressed.
20.SymbolsandTropesareliterallyexplained, when interpreted in accordance with thegrammatical lawswhich respectively govern their use.
21.Prophetic Symbolsare objects, real or imaginary,representativeof agents or objects possessing analogous characteristics. All agents or objectsseenin symbolic visions are symbols. The inspiredexplanationsof symbols are always literal, except when they are affirmed to be the same as some other symbol which represents the same object, as in Rev. 17:9.
22.Laws of Symbols.
I.“The Symbol and that which it represents resemble each other in the station they fill, the relation they sustain, and the agencies they exert in their respective spheres.”—Lord.
II. The Symbol and that which it represents are of thesame, or they are ofdifferentspecies, kinds, or rank, according to thenatureanduseof the symbol.
III.“When the Symbol is of such nature, or is used in such a relation that it can properly symbolise something[pg 011]differentfrom itself, the representative and that which it represents, while the counterpart of each other, are ofdifferentspecies, kinds, or rank.”—Lord.
Example.—Dan. 7:3, beasts; v. 17, governments.
IV.“Symbols that are of such a nature, station or relation, that there is nothing of an analogous kind that they can represent, symbolize agents, objects, acts, or events oftheir ownkind.”—Ib.Example.—Dan. 7:9.
V.“When the Symbol and that which it symbolizes differ from each other, the correspondence between the representative and that which it represents, still extends to their chief parts; and the elements or parts of the symbols denote corresponding parts in that which is symbolized.”—Ib.
VI.“The Names of Symbols are their literal and proper names, not metaphorical titles.”—Ib.
VII.“A single agent, in many instances, symbolizes a body and succession of agents.”—Ib.
VIII. Symbols of the same kind, and used in the same relations, always represent one class of objects; and when the office of a symbol has been once shown, the same symbol, similarly used, always fills a like office. They are never used arbitrarily.
IX. While like symbols represent like objects, the same agents are often indicated by different symbols.
Thus, a church may be symbolized by a city and a woman; and government, by a beast and a mountain, &c.
23.Inspired Explanations of Symbolic Representations:—
24.Tropesare figures of various kinds, used toillustratethe subjects to which they are applied.—They embrace the Simile, Metaphor, Prosopopœia, Apostrophe, Synecdoche, Allegory, &c.
25.Laws of Figures—(a.)“The terms in which they are expressed are used in their ordinary and literal sense.”—Lord.
(b.)“The agents or objects to which figures are applied are always expressly mentioned. Figures, in that respect, differ wholly from symbols, which never formally indicate, unless an interpretation is given, who the agents, or what the objects are which they represent.”—Ib.
(c.)“The figurative terms are always predicates, or are employed in affirming something of some other agent or object; and are therefore either nouns, verbs, adjectives or adverbs.”—Ib.
(d.)“As their terms are used literally, the figure lies, when they are employed in an unusual manner, simply in[pg 013]their being applied to objects to which they do not properly belong.”—Ib.
(e.)“They are used accordingly in all such cases for the purpose of illustration, and their explication is accomplished, not by assigning to them some new and extraordinary meaning, but simply by conjoining with them the terms of a comparison which expresses the relation in which they are employed.”—Ib.
(f.)“It is in metaphors and personification only that acts and qualities are ascribed to agents and objects that are incompatible with their nature; or do not properly belong to them.”—Ib. Theo. & Lit. Jour., vol. 1, p. 354.
26. ASimile, or comparison, is an affirmation that one agent, object, or act, islike, or as, another,—there being a real or imaginary resemblance. Sometimes only the mere fact of a resemblance is affirmed. At others, the nature of the resemblance is indicated.
Examples.—“As for man, his days areasgrass.”Psa. 103:15.“Whose garment waswhiteassnow.”Dan. 7:9.
27.Antithesisis a contrast, or placing in opposite lights things dissimilar.
Example.—“The wicked are overthrown and are not; but the house of the righteous shall stand.”Prov. 12:7.
28. AMetaphoris a simile comprised in a word, without thesignof comparison. It is an affirmation of an object, incompatible with its nature—i.e., it affirms that an object is, what literally it is onlylike; or attributes to it acts, to which its acts only bear aresemblance.
Examples.—“He is theRock.”Deut. 32:4.“Her gates shalllamentandmourn.”Isa. 3:25.
A metaphor may be a simple affirmation of what an object is, or it may embrace“the agent, the act, the object, and the effect of an action.”—Lord.
(a.) When an object is affirmed to be what it only resembles, that of which the affirmation is made is alwaysliterallyexpressed.
(b.)“When a nature is ascribed to an object that does not belong to it, the acts or results affirmed to it are proper to thatimputed nature, not to its own.”—Lord.
(c.)“The meaning of a metaphorical passage is precisely what it would be if a comparison only were affirmed.”—Ib.
29.An Elliptical Metaphoris where the figure is incomplete. An object, instead of being affirmed to be what it only resembles, is introduced by the name proper only to that resemblance. The literal name of the object and the affirmation to complete the figure are to be supplied.
To find the meaning of an elliptical metaphor, trace the word through the Bible, and find to what object such metaphorical term is applied.Example.—“And in that day there shall be aRootofJesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people.”Isa. 11:10.Explanation.—“I [Jesus] am theRootand the offspring ofDavid.”Rev. 22:16.
30.Prosopœia, orPersonification, is an address to an inanimate object, as if it were a person, and had intelligence.—Lord.Example.—“Give ear, O ye heavens, and I will speak; and hear, O earth, the words of my mouth.”Deut. 32:1.
31.An Apostropheis adigressionfrom the order of any discourse, and a directaddressto the persons of whom it treats, or to those who are to form a judgment respecting the subject of which it treats.—Lord.Example.—“Hear the word of theLord, ye rulers of Sodom: give ear unto the law of ourGod, ye people of Gomorrah.”Isa. 1:10.
32.An Allegoryis a narrative in which the subject of the discourse is described by an analogous subject, resembling it in its characteristics and circumstances—the subject of which it is descriptive being indicated in its connection.Examples.—See Ezek. 31:3-9; Ps. 80:8-16; Jud. 9:8-15.
Pasthistoricalevents, instead of supposititious ones, are sometimes used for illustration. When thus used they serve as allegories, without affecting their original historical significance.Example.—Gal. 4: 22-31. See also Rom. 9:7, 8; 1 Cor. 9:9, 10, and 10:11.
33.A Parableis a similitude taken from natural things, to instruct us in the knowledge of spiritual.Examples.—Matt. 13th, and 21:28-41.
The Parable differs from the Allegory in that the acts ascribed are appropriate to the agents to which they are attributed.[pg 015]In the Allegory, acts may be ascribed to real objects which are not natural to those objects.Example.—See Judges 9:7-15.
The Parable is sometimes used to denote a prophecy, (Num. 23:7); sometimes a discourse, (Job 27:1); sometimes a lamentation, (Micah 2:4); sometimes a proverb, or wise saying, (Prov. 26:7); and sometimes to indicate that a thing is apocryphal. Ezek. 20:49. The terms parable and allegory, are often wrongfully applied.
34.A Riddleis an enigma—something to be guessed.Example.—See Judges 14:24-18. It is sometimes used to denote an allegory. Ezek. 17:1-10.
35.Typesare emblems—greater events in the future being prefigured by typical observances,“which are a shadow of good things to come.”Col. 2:17.
36.The Hypocatastasis, or substitution, is a figure introduced by Mr.Lord, in which the objects, or agents, of one class are, without any formal notice, employed in the place of the persons or things of which the passages in which they occur treat; and they are exhibited either as exerting, or as subjected to an agency proper to their nature, in order to represent by analogy, the agency which those persons are to exert, or of which those things are to be the subjects.Example.—“O, my people, they which lead thee cause thee to err, and destroy the way of thy paths.”—Isa. 3:12,—expressive of the manner in which they were misled by their rulers and kept from the truth.
37.A Metonymyis a reversion, or the use of a noun to express that with which it is intimately connected, instead of using the term which would literally express the idea. Thus the cause is used for the effect, the effect for the cause, the thing containing for that which is contained in it, &c.Example.—“Ye have eaten up thevineyard.”Isa. 3:14—meaning the fruit of the vineyard.
38.A Synecdocheis the use of a word expressive of a part, to signify the whole; or that expressive of the whole, to denote only a part—as the genus for the species, or the species for the genus, &c.Example.—“Mandieth and wasteth away; yeamangiveth up the ghost, and where is he?”Job 14:10.
39.A Hyperboleis an exaggeration in which more is[pg 016]expressed than is intended to be understood.Example.—“I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written.”John 21:25—meaning that a great number might be written.
40.Ironyis the utterance of pointed remarks, contrary to the actual thoughts of the speaker or writer—not to deceive, but to add force to the remark.Examples.—“No doubt but ye are the people, and wisdom shall die with you.”Job 12:2.
“And it came to pass at noon, that Elijah mocked them, and said, Cry aloud: for heisa god: either he is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradventure he sleepeth and must be awaked.”1 Kings 18:27.
41.The Interrogation—while its legitimate use is to ask a question—is also used to affirm or deny with great emphasis. Affirmative interrogations usually havenoornotin connection with the verb.Example.—“IsnotGod in the height of the heavens?”Job 22:12.Examples of a negative.—“Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? or shall a nation be born at once?”Isa. 66:8.“Can the rush grow up without mire?”Job 8:11.
42.Exclamationsare digressions from the order of a discourse or writing, to give expression to the emotions of the speaker, or writer.Example.—“O that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away and be at rest!”Psa. 55:6.
43.Fablesare fictions—additions to the word ofGod. All false theories and doctrines supposed to be based on the Bible, all interpretations of Scripture which do violence to the laws of language and falsify their meaning, and all opinions which are the result of mere traditions and doctrines of men, are to be classed as fables. Mark 7:8-13; 1 Pet. 1:18; 1 Tim. 1:4; 4:7; Tit. 1:14.
44.Synchronous Scripturesare the several passages which have reference to any one and the same event.
Each portion of Scripture respecting any subject, must be considered in connection with all the Scriptures that refer to the same subject.—Compare, for example, Dan. 2:34, 35, 44; 7:18, 27; Matt. 6:10; 13:37-43; 35:34; 1 Tim. 4:1; Rev. 11:15-18.