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10 lines
5.2 KiB
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<p>We had in the foregoing chapter the great and solemn preparation that was made for the pouring out of the vials; now we have the performance of that work. Here observe,</p>
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<p class="tab-1">I. That, though every thing was made ready before, yet nothing was to be put in execution without an immediate positive order from God; and this he gave out of the temple, answering the prayers of his people, and avenging their quarrel.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">II. No sooner was the word of command given than it was immediately obeyed; no delay, no objection made. We find that some of the best men, as Moses and Jeremiah, did not so readily come in and comply with the call of God to their work; but the angels of God excel not only in strength, but in a readiness to do the will of God. God says, <i>Go your ways, and pour out the vials</i>, and immediately the work is begun. We are taught to pray that the will of God may be done on earth as it is done in heaven. And now we enter upon a series of very terrible dispensations of Providence, of which it is difficult to give the certain meaning or to make the particular application. But in the general it is worth our observation that,</p>
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<p class="tab-1">1. We have here a reference and allusion to several of the plagues of Egypt, such as the turning of their waters into blood, and smiting them with boils and sores. Their sins were alike, and so were their punishments.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">2. These vials have a plain reference to the seven trumpets, which represented the rise of antichrist; and we learn hence that the fall of the church’s enemies shall bear some resemblance to their rise, and that God can bring them down in such ways as they chose to exalt themselves. And the fall of antichrist shall be gradual; as Rome was not built in one day, so neither shall it fall in one day, but it falls by degrees; it shall fall so as to rise no more.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">3. The fall of the antichristian interest shall be universal. Every thing that any ways belonged to them, or could be serviceable to them, the premises and all their appurtenances, are put into the writ for destruction: their earth, their air, their sea, their rivers, their cities, all consigned over to ruin, all accursed for the sake of the wickedness of that people. Thus the creation groans and suffers through the sins of men. Now we proceed to,</p>
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<p class="tab-1">(1.) The first angel who poured out his vial, <a class="bibleref" title="Rev.16.2" href="/passage/?search=Rev.16.2">Rev. 16:2</a>. Observe, [1.] Where it fell—<i>upon the earth</i>; that is, say some, upon the common people; others upon the body of the Romish clergy, who were the basis of the papacy, and of an earthly spirit, all carrying on earthly designs. [2.] What it produced—<i>noisome and grievous sores on all who had the mark of the beast</i>. They had marked themselves by their sin; now God marks them out by his judgments. This sore, some think, signifies some of the first appearances of Providence against their state and interest which gave them great uneasiness, as it discovered their inward distemper and was a token of further evil; the plague—tokens appeared.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">(2.) <i>The second angel poured out his vial</i>; and here we see, [1.] Where it fell—<i>upon the sea</i>; that is, say some, upon the jurisdiction and dominion of the papacy; others upon the whole system of their religion, their false doctrines, their corrupt glosses, their superstitious rites, their idolatrous worship, their pardons, indulgences, a great conflux of wicked inventions and institutions, by which they maintain a trade and traffic advantageous to themselves, but injurious to all who deal with them. [2.] What it produced: It turned the sea into blood, <i>as the blood of a dead man, and every living soul died in the sea</i>. God discovered not only the vanity and falsehood of their religion, but the pernicious and deadly nature of it—that the souls of men were poisoned by that which was pretended to be the sure means of their salvation.</p>
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<p class="tab-1">(3.) The next angel poured out his vial; and we are told, [1.] Where it fell—<i>upon the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters</i>; that is, say some very learned men, upon their emissaries, and especially the Jesuits, who, like streams, conveyed the venom and poison of their errors and idolatries from the spring-head through the earth. [2.] What effect it had upon them: <i>It turned them into blood</i>; some think it stirred up Christian princes to take a just revenge upon those that had been the great incendiaries of the world, and had occasioned the shedding of the blood of armies and of martyrs. The following doxology (<a class="bibleref" title="Rev.16.5,Rev.16.6" href="/passage/?search=Rev.16.5,Rev.16.6"><span class="bibleref" title="Rev.16.5">Rev. 16:5</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Rev.16.6">6</span></a>) favours this sense. The instrument that God makes use of in this work is here called <i>the angel of the waters</i>, who extols the righteousness of God in this retaliation: <i>They have shed the blood of thy saints, and thou hast given them blood to drink, for they are worthy</i>, to which another angel answered by full consent, <a class="bibleref" title="Rev.16.7" href="/passage/?search=Rev.16.7">Rev. 16:7</a>.</p>
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